Thursday, 19 June 2014
Ethnic Response to Sleep Disturbances
New research suggests sleep disturbancessleep disturbance are associated with clinically
meaningful reductions in health-related quality of life.
The research is found in theJournal
of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
Results indicate that physical health-related quality of life in
African-Americans who snored frequently, had insomnia symptoms or reported
excessive daytime sleepiness was significantly worse than in Caucasians.
African-Americans with insomnia also had significantly more
physical limitations than Hispanics.
However, when mental health-related quality of life was
evaluated, it was Hispanics with frequent snoring, insomnia symptoms or excessive
daytime sleepiness who had significantly greater mental distress than
Caucasians.
African-Americans with insomnia also had significantly worse mental
health than Caucasians.
“The study highlights the increased disparities among African-
and Latino-Americans compared with Caucasians even in the sleep and
health-related quality of life domain,” said lead author Carol M. Baldwin, PhD,
RN, FAAN.
The study involved a secondary analysis of data from the Sleep
Heart Health Study, a multi-center study that recruited participants from seven
regions of the U.S. Eighty-six percent of the 5,237 people in the current study
were Caucasian, nine percent were African-American and five percent were
Hispanic.
The Hispanic participants were predominantly of Mexican heritage
residing in Arizona, with a smaller number of Puerto-Rican participants from
the New York cohort. All participants were 40 years of age or older, and their
mean age was 63.5 years.
The presence of obstructive sleep apnea was detected by overnight, in-home
polysomnography. Snoring and insomnia – defined as trouble falling asleep,
staying asleep or waking too early – were assessed using the Sleep Habits
Questionnaire. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale was used to evaluate daytime
sleepiness.
Health-related quality of life was assessed with the physical
and mental composite scales of the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item short form
survey.
According to the authors, low scores on the physical scale
suggest limitations in self-care and physical activities, severe bodily pain
and frequent tiredness. A low score on the mental scale indicates frequent
psychological distress, as well as social and role disability due to emotional
problems.
The study found that sleep disturbances were common, with 46
percent of people having at least mild sleep apnea, 34 percent reporting
frequent snoring, 30 percent having insomnia symptoms and 25 percent reporting
excessive daytime sleepiness.
Frequent snoring was significantly more common among Hispanics
(41 percent), and excessive daytime sleepiness was significantly more common
among African-Americans (32 percent). There were no statistically significant
differences in the distribution of obstructive sleep apnea or insomnia symptoms
by race.
According to Baldwin, the study could help reduce health
disparities and improve outcomes by advancing “tailored care” in sleep
medicine.
“These findings support the need for sleep clinicians to use
culturally-responsive sleep education, assessment and intervention approaches,
as well as depression, anxiety and
other relevant mood and socioeconomic-status measures,” she said.
The authors cautioned that the correlational nature of the study
did not allow for an analysis of causality. Baldwin added that the causes of
differences in health-related quality of life can be complex and may include
such factors as lifestyle and activity patterns, diet, sleep architecture and
access to health care.
However, the study suggests that the impact of sleep disorders
on daily living and general well-being may be similar to that of other chronic
conditions. The mean score profiles for health-related quality of life in
people with sleep apnea and other sleep symptoms were similar to those that
have been previously reported for patients with hypertension and type 2
diabetes.