A longitudinal examination of psychosocial mechanisms linking discrimination with objective and subjective sleep

被引:2
作者
Dautovich, Natalie D. [1 ,5 ]
Reid, Morgan P. [1 ]
Ghose, Sarah M. [1 ]
Kim, Giyeon [2 ]
Tighe, Caitlan A. [3 ]
Shoji, Kristy D. [4 ]
Kliewer, Wendy [1 ]
机构
[1] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Psychol Dept, Richmond, VA USA
[2] Chung Ang Univ, Dept Psychol, Seoul, South Korea
[3] VA Pittsburgh Healthcare Syst, Mental Illness Res Educ & Clin Ctr MIRECC, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[4] Kerrville VA CLC, Eastern Colorado Hlth Care Syst Mental Hlth Serv, Kerrville, TX USA
[5] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, 800 West Franklin St,Room 203,Box 842018, Richmond, VA 23284 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Discrimination; Sleep; Actigraphy; Anxiety; Social well-being; Sleep diary; PERCEIVED RACIAL-DISCRIMINATION; POPULATION; HEALTH; ASSOCIATION; ANXIETY; BLACK;
D O I
10.1016/j.sleh.2023.06.007
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: Although chronic discrimination negatively impacts sleep, the cross-sectional nature of most research limits the understanding of how changes in discrimination over time are associated with sleep health. Therefore, the aims of this study were to explore the: (1) longitudinal association between daily discrimination and subjective and objective sleep; (2) mediating roles of anxiety and social well-being; and (3) moderating role of change in discrimination over time.Methods: An archival analysis was completed using data from the Midlife in the United States study across 3 timepoints. Participants were primarily female-identifying, white, and college-educated. Measures included Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (N = 958), sleep diaries (N = 307), and actigraphy (N = 304). Daily discrimination, the Social Well-Being Scale, and the Mood and Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire were also administered. Moderated parallel mediations were performed using the PROCESS macro controlling for depressive symptoms.Results: More discrimination at time 1 was associated with worse global sleep quality (b = 0.10 and p = .001) and daily sleep quality (b = 0.03 and p = .02) and worse objective sleep-onset latency (b = 0.93 and p = .02), wake after sleep onset (b = 1.09 and p = .002), and sleep efficiency (b = -0.52 and p < .001) at time 3. Social well-being mediated the associations between discrimination and subjective global sleep quality 95% CI [0.00, 0.03] and daily sleep quality 95% CI [0.00, 0.01] and objective TST 95% CI [0.00, 0.96] when discrimination was increasing or chronic. Anxiety mediated the discrimination-global sleep quality association regardless of changes in discrimination.Conclusions: Discrimination showed durable associations with a broad array of sleep outcomes across a 10year period. Anxiety and social well-being linked discrimination to subjective sleep outcomes, illustrating the importance of psychosocial well-being for sleep health in those experiencing discrimination.(c) 2023 National Sleep Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:654 / 661
页数:8
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