Shift work, clinically significant sleep disorders and mental health in a representative, cross-sectional sample of young working adults

被引:0
|
作者
Amy C. Reynolds
Bastien Lechat
Yohannes Adama Melaku
Kelly Sansom
Brandon W. J. Brown
Meagan E. Crowther
Sian Wanstall
Kathleen J. Maddison
Jennifer H. Walsh
Leon Straker
Robert J. T. Adams
Nigel McArdle
Peter R. Eastwood
机构
[1] Flinders University,Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute (Sleep Health)
[2] Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital,Department of Pulmonary Physiology and Sleep Medicine, West Australian Sleep Disorders Research Institute
[3] The University of Western Australia,School of Human Sciences, Centre for Sleep Science
[4] CQ University Australia,Appleton Institute
[5] Curtin University,School of Allied Health
[6] Flinders University,Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Mental health conditions confer considerable global disease burden in young adults, who are also the highest demographic to work shifts, and of whom 20% meet criteria for a sleep disorder. We aimed to establish the relationship between the combined effect of shift work and sleep disorders, and mental health. The Raine Study is the only longitudinal, population-based birth cohort in the world with gold-standard, Level 1 measurement of sleep (polysomnography, PSG) collected in early adulthood. Participants (aged 22y) underwent in-laboratory PSG and completed detailed sleep questionnaires. Multivariable adjusted robust linear regression models were conducted to explore associations with anxiety (GAD7) and depression (PHQ9), adjusted for sex, health comorbidities, and work hours/week. Data were from 660 employed young adults (27.3% shift workers). At least one clinically significant sleep disorder was present in 18% of shift workers (day, evening and night shifts) and 21% of non-shift workers (p = 0.51); 80% were undiagnosed. Scores for anxiety and depression were not different between shift and non-shift workers (p = 0.29 and p = 0.82); but were higher in those with a sleep disorder than those without (Md(IQR) anxiety: 7.0(4.0–10.0) vs 4.0(1.0–6.0)), and depression: (9.0(5.0–13.0) vs 4.0(2.0–6.0)). Considering evening and night shift workers only (i.e. excluding day shift workers) revealed an interaction between shift work and sleep disorder status for anxiety (p = 0.021), but not depression (p = 0.96), with anxiety scores being highest in those shift workers with a sleep disorder (Md(IQR) 8.5(4.0–12.2). We have shown that clinical sleep disorders are common in young workers and are largely undiagnosed. Measures of mental health do not appear be different between shift and non-shift workers. These findings indicate that the identification and treatment of clinical sleep disorders should be prioritised for young workers as these sleep disorders, rather than shift work per se, are associated with poorer mental health. These negative mental health effects appear to be greatest in those who work evening and/or night shift and have a sleep disorder.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Shift work, clinically significant sleep disorders and mental health in a representative, cross-sectional sample of young working adults
    Reynolds, Amy C.
    Lechat, Bastien
    Melaku, Yohannes Adama
    Sansom, Kelly
    Brown, Brandon W. J.
    Crowther, Meagan E.
    Wanstall, Sian
    Maddison, Kathleen J.
    Walsh, Jennifer H.
    Straker, Leon
    Adams, Robert J. T.
    McArdle, Nigel
    Eastwood, Peter R.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [2] Clinically significant sleep disorders, not shift work status, are associated with mental health in young adults: findings from a representative, population-based Australian cohort study
    Reynolds, A.
    Lechat, B.
    Melaku, Y. Adama
    Sansom, K.
    Brown, B. W.
    Crowther, M. E.
    Wanstall, S. E.
    Maddison, K. J.
    Walsh, J. H.
    Straker, L.
    Adams, R. J.
    McArdle, N.
    Eastwood, P. R.
    JOURNAL OF SLEEP RESEARCH, 2022, 31
  • [3] The stigma of mental health problems: A cross-sectional study in a representative sample of Spain
    Gonzalez Sanguino, Clara
    Santos-Olmo, Ana Belen
    Zamorano, Sara
    Sanchez-Iglesias, Ivan
    Munoz Lopez, Manuel
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 69 (08) : 1928 - 1937
  • [4] Socioeconomic status and sleep duration among a representative, cross-sectional sample of US adults
    Wetzel, Sarah
    Bilal, Usama
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 24 (01)
  • [5] eHealth tools use and mental health: a cross-sectional network analysis in a representative sample
    Ochnik, Dominika
    Cholewa-Wiktor, Marta
    Jakubiak, Monika
    Pataj, Magdalena
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01)
  • [6] Urbanization, loneliness and mental health model - A cross-sectional network analysis with a representative sample
    Ochnik, Dominika
    Bulawa, Bartlomiej
    Nagel, Paulina
    Gachowski, Marek
    Budzinski, Marcin
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [7] eHealth tools use and mental health: a cross-sectional network analysis in a representative sample
    Dominika Ochnik
    Marta Cholewa-Wiktor
    Monika Jakubiak
    Magdalena Pataj
    Scientific Reports, 14
  • [8] Sleep disorders and night-shift work in nursing students: a cross-sectional study
    Belingheri, Michael
    Luciani, Michela
    Ausili, Davide
    Paladino, Maria Emilia
    Di Mauro, Stefania
    De Vito, Giovanni
    Riva, Michele Augusto
    MEDICINA DEL LAVORO, 2022, 113 (01):
  • [9] Dose response association of objective physical activity with mental health in a representative national sample of adults: A cross-sectional study
    Bernard, Paquito
    Dore, Isabelle
    Romain, Ahmed-Jerome
    Hains-Monfette, Gabriel
    Kingsbury, Celia
    Sabiston, Catherine
    PLOS ONE, 2018, 13 (10):
  • [10] CROSS-SECTIONAL ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN REGULAR PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND DOMAINS OF MENTAL HEALTH IN A GLOBAL SAMPLE OF YOUNG ADULTS
    Huong, Christopher
    Brown, Denver M.
    ANNALS OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2023, 57 : S103 - S103