Sleep difficulties and adolescent internalising symptoms: The moderating role of sleep regularity

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Sleep Research Pub Date : 2025-02-26 DOI:10.1111/jsr.14481
Jinjin Yan, Mingjun Xie, Zhenqiang Zhao, Jiwoon Bae, Heining Cham, Mona El-Sheikh, Tiffany Yip
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Abstract

Adolescent sleep health is a global health concern. Sleep difficulties have detrimental consequences for adolescent mental health; however, prior research has typically focussed on a single dimension of sleep, used self-reported data, and relied on cross-sectional designs. Using 14 days of self-reported daily diaries and actigraphy-measured sleep data, this study addressed these gaps by examining the daily associations between sleep difficulties (e.g. longer sleep onset latency, greater sleep disturbance) and adolescent internalising symptoms, with sleep regularity as a moderator of these associations. The sample included 350 adolescents (69.1% females; Mage = 14.27, SD = 0.61; 21.32% African American, 40.3% Asian American, 34.9% Latinx, and 2.5% other ethnic/racial minorities) in the northeastern United States. Adolescents provided daily actigraphy (i.e. sleep duration and wakefulness after sleep onset) and self-reported (i.e. sleep onset latency and sleep disturbance) sleep data. Adolescent internalising symptoms (i.e. anxious mood and somatic symptoms) were also assessed via daily diary reports. The Sleep Regularity Index was a measure of sleep variability using a metric reflecting minute-by-minute assessment of consistency in sleep/wake patterns, averaged across 14-day wrist actigraphy data. Multilevel modelling analysis accounted for the nested structure of the diary data. Nightly sleep difficulties were linked to more internalising symptoms (i.e. more anxious mood and somatic symptoms) the following day. Sleep regularity moderated the associations between sleep onset latency and sleep duration with adolescent anxious mood, and protected against the negative impact of sleep disturbance on adolescent somatic symptoms. Findings highlight the important role of sleep regularity in the daily links between sleep and internalising symptoms.

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睡眠困难和青少年内化症状:睡眠规律的调节作用。
青少年睡眠健康是一个全球性的健康问题。睡眠困难对青少年的心理健康有不利影响;然而,之前的研究通常侧重于睡眠的单一维度,使用自我报告的数据,并依赖于横截面设计。利用14天的自我报告的日常日记和活动记录仪测量的睡眠数据,本研究通过检查睡眠困难(如更长的睡眠潜伏期,更大的睡眠障碍)和青少年内化症状之间的日常联系,以及睡眠规律作为这些联系的调节剂,解决了这些差距。样本包括350名青少年(69.1%为女性;Mage = 14.27, SD = 0.61;21.32%的非裔美国人,40.3%的亚裔美国人,34.9%的拉丁裔和2.5%的其他少数民族/种族)在美国东北部。青少年提供了每日活动记录(即睡眠持续时间和睡眠开始后的清醒情况)和自我报告(即睡眠开始潜伏期和睡眠障碍)睡眠数据。青少年内化症状(即焦虑情绪和躯体症状)也通过每日日记报告进行评估。睡眠规律指数是一种睡眠变异性的测量方法,使用一种反映睡眠/觉醒模式一致性的每分钟评估指标,平均为14天的手腕活动记录数据。多层次建模分析解释了日记数据的嵌套结构。夜间睡眠困难与第二天更多的内化症状(即更焦虑的情绪和躯体症状)有关。睡眠规律调节了睡眠潜伏期和睡眠持续时间与青少年焦虑情绪的关系,并防止睡眠障碍对青少年躯体症状的负面影响。研究结果强调了睡眠规律在睡眠和内化症状之间的日常联系中的重要作用。
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来源期刊
Journal of Sleep Research
Journal of Sleep Research 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.00
自引率
6.80%
发文量
234
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sleep Research is dedicated to basic and clinical sleep research. The Journal publishes original research papers and invited reviews in all areas of sleep research (including biological rhythms). The Journal aims to promote the exchange of ideas between basic and clinical sleep researchers coming from a wide range of backgrounds and disciplines. The Journal will achieve this by publishing papers which use multidisciplinary and novel approaches to answer important questions about sleep, as well as its disorders and the treatment thereof.
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