Stress and sleep remain significant predictors of health after controlling for negative affect

被引:23
作者
Benham, Grant [1 ]
Charak, Ruby [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Rio Grande Valley, Dept Psychol Sci, 1201 W Univ Dr, Edinburg, TX 78539 USA
关键词
daytime sleepiness; health; hierarchical regression; negative affect; sleep quality; stress; QUALITY INDEX; ORGANIZATIONAL-PSYCHOLOGY; DAYTIME SLEEPINESS; RECOMMENDATIONS; COMPLAINTS; INTERVENTION; ASSOCIATIONS; VALIDATION; REACTIVITY; DURATION;
D O I
10.1002/smi.2840
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Prior research has shown that the predictive power of a stress-health model can be improved by the addition of sleep as a predictor variable. However, negative affect (NA) may act as a confounding variable in stress-health relationships: a source of bias that potentially inflates the observed relationship between stress and health. The current study examines whether stress and sleep remain significant predictors of health after controlling for trait NA. An online survey containing well-established measures of stress, sleep, health, and NA was completed by 460 undergraduates. Hierarchical regression analyses revealed that stress and sleep remained significant predictors of self-reported health after controlling for the effects of NA. Our findings support the notion that stress-health models can be improved by the integration of sleep as an additional predictor variable and demonstrate that the stress/sleep-health relationships are not fully explained by dispositional NA. From a theoretical perspective, the inclusion of NA measures allows researchers to tease apart the unique contributions of predictor variables. This knowledge can subsequently be put to the test with greater confidence in the design of interventions that seek to improve health through stress reduction and improved sleep.
引用
收藏
页码:59 / 68
页数:10
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2014, STAT ANAL MISSING DA
[2]  
[Anonymous], BMJ
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2015, IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2017, Discovering Statistics Using IBM SPSS Statistics
[5]   Ethical considerations for sleep intervention in organizational psychology research [J].
Barber, Larissa K. .
STRESS AND HEALTH, 2017, 33 (05) :691-698
[6]   Modifying the Sleep Treatment Education Program for Students to include technology use (STEPS-TECH): Intervention effects on objective and subjective sleep outcomes [J].
Barber, Larissa K. ;
Cucalon, Maria S. .
STRESS AND HEALTH, 2017, 33 (05) :684-690
[7]   Consistent-Sufficient Sleep Predicts Improvements in Self-Regulatory Performance and Psychological Strain [J].
Barber, Larissa K. ;
Munz, David C. .
STRESS AND HEALTH, 2011, 27 (04) :314-324
[8]   Sleep Consistency and Sufficiency: Are Both Necessary for Less Psychological Strain? [J].
Barber, Larissa K. ;
Munz, David C. ;
Bagsby, Patricia G. ;
Powell, Eric D. .
STRESS AND HEALTH, 2010, 26 (03) :186-193
[9]   Sleep and Physiological Dysregulation: A Closer Look at Sleep Intraindividual Variability [J].
Bei, Bei ;
Seeman, Teresa E. ;
Carroll, Judith E. ;
Wiley, Joshua F. .
SLEEP, 2017, 40 (09)
[10]   Beyond the mean: A systematic review on the correlates of daily intraindividual variability of sleep/wake patterns [J].
Bei, Bei ;
Wiley, Joshua F. ;
Trinder, John ;
Manber, Rachel .
SLEEP MEDICINE REVIEWS, 2016, 28 :108-124