Sleep inequities and associations between poor sleep and mental health for school-aged children: findings from the New Zealand Health Survey.

Diane Muller, T Leigh Signal, Mathangi Shanthakumar, Sarah-Jane Paine
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Abstract

In Aotearoa/New Zealand, ethnic inequities in sleep health exist for young children and adults and are largely explained by inequities in socioeconomic deprivation. Poor sleep is related to poor mental health for these age groups but whether sleep inequities and associations with mental health exist for school-aged children is unclear. We aimed to (1) determine the prevalence of poor sleep health including sleep problems by ethnicity, (2) examine social determinants of health associated with poor sleep, and (3) investigate relationships between poor sleep and mental health for 5-14-year-olds using cross-sectional New Zealand Health Survey data (n = 8895). Analyses included weighted prevalence estimates and multivariable logistic regression. Short sleep was more prevalent for Indigenous Māori (17.6%), Pacific (24.5%), and Asian (18.4%) children, and snoring/noisy breathing during sleep was more prevalent for Māori (29.4%) and Pacific (28.0%) children, compared to European/Other (short sleep 10.2%, snoring/noisy breathing 17.6%). Ethnicity and neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation were independently associated with short sleep and snoring/noisy breathing during sleep. Short sleep was associated with increased odds of anxiety, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and activity-limiting emotional and psychological conditions after adjusting for ethnicity, deprivation, age, and gender. In addition, long sleep was independently associated with increased odds of depression. These findings demonstrate that for school-aged children ethnic inequities in sleep exist, socioeconomic deprivation is associated with poor sleep, and poor sleep is associated with poor mental health. Sociopolitical action is imperative to tackle social inequities to support sleep equity and mental health across the lifecourse.

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学龄儿童睡眠不平等以及睡眠不佳与心理健康之间的关系:新西兰健康调查的结果。
在奥特亚罗瓦/新西兰,幼儿和成年人在睡眠健康方面存在种族不平等,这在很大程度上是由于社会经济贫困造成的。对于这些年龄组的人来说,睡眠质量差与心理健康状况不佳有关,但学龄儿童的睡眠质量是否不平等以及与心理健康的关系尚不清楚。我们的目标是:(1)根据种族确定睡眠质量差(包括睡眠问题)的发生率;(2)研究与睡眠质量差相关的健康社会决定因素;(3)利用新西兰健康调查的横截面数据(n = 8895)研究 5-14 岁儿童睡眠质量差与心理健康之间的关系。分析包括加权患病率估计和多变量逻辑回归。与欧裔/其他族裔儿童(睡眠时间短占10.2%,打鼾/呼吸不畅占17.6%)相比,睡眠时间短在土著毛利族儿童(17.6%)、太平洋裔儿童(24.5%)和亚裔儿童(18.4%)中更为普遍,在睡眠中打鼾/呼吸不畅在毛利族儿童(29.4%)和太平洋裔儿童(28.0%)中更为普遍。种族和邻里社会经济贫困与睡眠时间短和睡眠时打鼾/呼吸噪音有独立关联。在对种族、贫困程度、年龄和性别进行调整后,睡眠时间短与焦虑症、注意力缺陷多动障碍以及限制活动的情绪和心理状况的发生几率增加有关。此外,睡眠时间过长也与抑郁几率增加有关。这些研究结果表明,学龄儿童在睡眠方面存在种族不平等,社会经济贫困与睡眠质量差有关,而睡眠质量差与精神健康状况差有关。当务之急是采取社会政治行动,解决社会不平等问题,以支持整个生命过程中的睡眠公平和心理健康。
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