埃及坦塔大学医学院学生的睡眠习惯及其与白天嗜睡的关系

Q3 Mathematics
Salwa A. Atlam, H. Elsabagh
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Ordinal regression analyses were done on the ESS findings in relation to demographics and sleep habits. p-values<0.05 were accepted as statistically significant. Results The study included 899 medical students. Most of the participants were Egyptians (67%), rural residents (57.4%), and in the preclinical stage (79.5%). Males represented 66.0% of the study participants and participants average age (SD) was 21.98 (1.13) years. The average durations (SD) of night sleep were 7.3 (1.6) hours in work days and 8.7 (2.1) hours during the weekends. Both were significantly longer among young (<21 years-old) and preclinical students (p<0.05). Students had on average (SD) 1.33 (0.29) hours duration of napping, but 60% of the participants never or rarely scheduled for napping. Larger proportion of male and Malaysian students sometimes scheduled for napping more significantly than their peers (p<0.05). Only 16.24% of students reported that the cause of daytime napping was no enough sleep at night. The students reported sleep disorders of insomnia in the form of waking up too early, trouble falling asleep, or waking up at night with failure to re-sleep (31, 30, and 26%, respectively). Snoring (22.2%) and restless legs (22.0%) were also reported by the students. High chances of dozing off was reported by 22.02% of the participants, of which 10% used sleeping pills, 41.4% suffered psychological affection, and 34.8% reported life pattern affection. We found an increased chance of daytime sleepiness among males (0.430 times) and Egyptian (2.018 times) students. There was a decreased chance of daytime sleepiness in students from rural areas and those below 21-years-old (0.262 and 0.343 times, respectively). Absence of chronic diseases suffering was significantly associated with 5.573 more chance of daytime sleepiness or dozing off. In addition, enough and average sleep at night significantly decreased the chance of daytime sleepiness by 6.292 and 6.578, respectively, whereas daytime consumption of caffeinated beverages significantly decreased the chance of daytime sleepiness by 0.341. Conclusion There was unbalanced sleep duration in work days and weekends as well as lack of scheduling for napping among the students. Sleep disorders as insomnia, snoring, and restless legs were associated with excessive daytime sleepiness. Some students who suffered daytime sleepiness also underwent psychological and life pattern affection including taking sleeping pills. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要目的了解医学生的睡眠质量(习惯、障碍)及日间嗜睡情况。方法2018年9月至2018年11月在埃及坦塔大学医学院进行了一项基于横断面问卷的研究。该研究招募了埃及和马来西亚的大学生,并采用了两份修改后的问卷,即“睡眠习惯和生活方式”和“爱普沃斯嗜睡量表”(ESS)。采用SPSS进行统计分析。结果以频率、百分比、均数±标准差(SD)表示。采用卡方检验探讨分类变量之间的相关性。采用独立样本t检验检测组间均值差异。对ESS调查结果与人口统计学和睡眠习惯的关系进行了有序回归分析。p值<0.05被认为有统计学意义。结果共纳入医学生899人。大多数参与者是埃及人(67%)、农村居民(57.4%)和临床前阶段(79.5%)。男性占研究参与者的66.0%,参与者的平均年龄(SD)为21.98(1.13)岁。工作日夜间平均睡眠时间为7.3(1.6)小时,周末为8.7(2.1)小时。在青少年(<21岁)和临床前学生中,两者均显著延长(p<0.05)。学生的平均午睡时间(标准差)为1.33(0.29)小时,但60%的参与者从不或很少安排午睡。男生和大马学生有时午睡的比例明显高于同龄学生(p<0.05)。只有16.24%的学生报告说白天打盹的原因是晚上睡眠不足。这些学生报告了失眠的睡眠障碍,表现为醒得太早、入睡困难或夜间醒来后无法再入睡(分别为31%、30%和26%)。打鼾(22.2%)和不宁腿(22.0%)也被学生报告。22.02%的参与者报告瞌睡的几率很高,其中10%使用安眠药,41.4%受到心理影响,34.8%受到生活模式影响。我们发现,男生(0.430次)和埃及学生(2.018次)白天犯困的几率更高。农村学生和21岁以下学生白天犯困的次数减少(分别为0.262次和0.343次)。没有慢性疾病的人白天犯困或打瞌睡的几率要高出5.573倍。此外,充足的夜间睡眠和平均睡眠能显著降低白天困倦的几率,分别为6.292和6.578,而白天饮用含咖啡因的饮料能显著降低白天困倦的几率,分别为0.341。结论学生在工作日和周末睡眠时间不平衡,缺乏午睡时间安排。失眠、打鼾和不宁腿等睡眠障碍与白天过度嗜睡有关。一些白天嗜睡的学生还接受了心理和生活模式的影响,包括服用安眠药。充足和平均的夜间睡眠时间以及白天饮用含咖啡因的饮料减少了白天困倦的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sleep habits and their association with daytime sleepiness among medical students of Tanta University, Egypt
Abstract Objectives This study aimed to assess the sleep quality (habits and disorders) and the daytime sleepiness among medical students. Methods A cross-sectional questionnaire-based study was conducted during September 2018, through November 2018 at the Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University, Egypt. The study recruited undergraduate Egyptian and Malaysian students and applied a modified form of two questionnaires, namely the Sleep Habits and Life Style and the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS)”. Statistical analysis was done using SPSS. The results were expressed as frequency, percentage, and mean ± standard deviation (SD). Chi-square test was used to explore associations between categorical variables. An independent sample t-test was used to detect the mean differences between groups. Ordinal regression analyses were done on the ESS findings in relation to demographics and sleep habits. p-values<0.05 were accepted as statistically significant. Results The study included 899 medical students. Most of the participants were Egyptians (67%), rural residents (57.4%), and in the preclinical stage (79.5%). Males represented 66.0% of the study participants and participants average age (SD) was 21.98 (1.13) years. The average durations (SD) of night sleep were 7.3 (1.6) hours in work days and 8.7 (2.1) hours during the weekends. Both were significantly longer among young (<21 years-old) and preclinical students (p<0.05). Students had on average (SD) 1.33 (0.29) hours duration of napping, but 60% of the participants never or rarely scheduled for napping. Larger proportion of male and Malaysian students sometimes scheduled for napping more significantly than their peers (p<0.05). Only 16.24% of students reported that the cause of daytime napping was no enough sleep at night. The students reported sleep disorders of insomnia in the form of waking up too early, trouble falling asleep, or waking up at night with failure to re-sleep (31, 30, and 26%, respectively). Snoring (22.2%) and restless legs (22.0%) were also reported by the students. High chances of dozing off was reported by 22.02% of the participants, of which 10% used sleeping pills, 41.4% suffered psychological affection, and 34.8% reported life pattern affection. We found an increased chance of daytime sleepiness among males (0.430 times) and Egyptian (2.018 times) students. There was a decreased chance of daytime sleepiness in students from rural areas and those below 21-years-old (0.262 and 0.343 times, respectively). Absence of chronic diseases suffering was significantly associated with 5.573 more chance of daytime sleepiness or dozing off. In addition, enough and average sleep at night significantly decreased the chance of daytime sleepiness by 6.292 and 6.578, respectively, whereas daytime consumption of caffeinated beverages significantly decreased the chance of daytime sleepiness by 0.341. Conclusion There was unbalanced sleep duration in work days and weekends as well as lack of scheduling for napping among the students. Sleep disorders as insomnia, snoring, and restless legs were associated with excessive daytime sleepiness. Some students who suffered daytime sleepiness also underwent psychological and life pattern affection including taking sleeping pills. Enough and average sleep duration at night as well as daytime consumption of caffeinated beverages decreased the chance of daytime sleepiness.
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来源期刊
Epidemiologic Methods
Epidemiologic Methods Mathematics-Applied Mathematics
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: Epidemiologic Methods (EM) seeks contributions comparable to those of the leading epidemiologic journals, but also invites papers that may be more technical or of greater length than what has traditionally been allowed by journals in epidemiology. Applications and examples with real data to illustrate methodology are strongly encouraged but not required. Topics. genetic epidemiology, infectious disease, pharmaco-epidemiology, ecologic studies, environmental exposures, screening, surveillance, social networks, comparative effectiveness, statistical modeling, causal inference, measurement error, study design, meta-analysis
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