Sleep characteristics during the first year postpartum in a cohort of Black and White women

Erin E. Kishman , Jihong Liu , Shawn D. Youngstedt , Chih-Hsiang Yang , Bridget Armstrong , Xuewen Wang
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Abstract

Study objectives

The postpartum period is a unique time when sleep deficiency often occurs. Black and White adults are reported to have differences in sleep characteristics, but little is known if these differences exist in the postpartum period. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine sleep characteristics in a cohort of Black and White women from 6-8 weeks to 12 months postpartum.

Methods

Participants were 49 Black and 85 White women who gave birth to an infant at ≥37 weeks gestation. Participants were instructed to wear an Actiwatch for 7 days at 6-8 weeks, 4, 6, 9, and 12 months postpartum. Mixed-effects linear models with a race by time interaction were used to examine if characteristics differed between races over time.

Results

Only bedtime varied by race. White women had a later bedtime at 6-8 weeks compared to 6 months, but no significant change occurred for Black women. For the entire sample, average nighttime sleep duration increased from 385 min at 6-8 weeks to 404 min at 4 months postpartum. Percent sleep during the sleep interval and wake after sleep onset (WASO) improved by 6 and 9 months, respectively. However, average WASO remained >45 min and sleep efficiency <85 % at all timepoints for both Black and White women. Compared to White women, Black women had significantly shorter sleep duration (range: 40.6-59.9 min shorter across all timepoints, p < 0.0001) and time in bed (range: 17.5-67.6 minutes shorter, p = 0.0046), and lower percent sleep (range: 0.7-1.2 % lower, p = 0.0407) and sleep efficiency (range: 2.6-5.7 % lower, p = 0.0005). Sociodemographic factors were associated with sleep outcomes in Black and White women while behavioral factors were associated with sleep outcomes in White women only.

Conclusion

While there were improvements in nighttime sleep duration and quality, sleep duration remained suboptimal, and quality remained poor throughout the first year postpartum. In this sample, differences existed in factors associated with sleep outcomes between Black and White women.

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一组黑人和白人妇女产后第一年的睡眠特征
研究目的产后是一个特殊时期,往往会出现睡眠不足。据报道,黑人和白人成年人在睡眠特征方面存在差异,但这些差异是否存在于产后时期却鲜为人知。因此,本研究的目的是检查一组黑人和白人妇女在产后 6-8 周至 12 个月期间的睡眠特征。参与者被要求在产后 6-8 周、4、6、9 和 12 个月佩戴 Actiwatch 手表 7 天。使用混合效应线性模型和种族与时间的交互作用来检验不同种族的特征是否随时间而变化。与 6 个月相比,白人妇女在 6-8 周时的就寝时间较晚,但黑人妇女的就寝时间没有明显变化。在整个样本中,平均夜间睡眠时间从 6-8 周时的 385 分钟增加到产后 4 个月时的 404 分钟。产后 6 个月和 9 个月时,睡眠间歇期的睡眠百分比和睡眠开始后唤醒(WASO)分别有所改善。然而,黑人和白人妇女在所有时间点的平均睡眠间隔和睡眠效率均保持在 45 分钟和 85%。与白人女性相比,黑人女性的睡眠时间(范围:在所有时间点上缩短 40.6-59.9 分钟,p <0.0001)和卧床时间(范围:缩短 17.5-67.6 分钟,p = 0.0046)明显缩短,睡眠百分比(范围:降低 0.7-1.2%,p = 0.0407)和睡眠效率(范围:降低 2.6-5.7%,p = 0.0005)明显降低。社会人口因素与黑人和白人妇女的睡眠结果相关,而行为因素仅与白人妇女的睡眠结果相关。在该样本中,黑人和白人妇女的睡眠结果相关因素存在差异。
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来源期刊
Sleep epidemiology
Sleep epidemiology Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine, Clinical Neurology, Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
CiteScore
1.80
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