Generalized stress and sleep hygiene explain the relationship between sexual/gender identity and sleep quality

Jess Campbell, Emily Hokett, Audrey Duarte
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Abstract

IntroductionTypically, LGBTQ + people sleep more poorly than their cisgender heterosexual (cishet) counterparts. However, there is a lack of literature investigating the impact of different lifestyle/psychosocial factors, outside of minority stress, on the negative relationship between being a sexual/gender identity minority and sleep quality. The current study aims to help fill critical gaps in the literature by looking at the effects generalized stress, COVID-19-related stress, social support, and sleep hygiene have on this relationship.MethodsTwo hundred and seventy-three participants (74 LGBTQ+;199 cishet), recruited online, completed a series of questionnaires assessing sleep quality, sleep hygiene, generalized stress, minority stress, COVID-19-related stress, and social support.ResultsAnalyses showed that LGBTQ + participants reported worse sleep quality, higher levels of generalized stress and COVID-19 stress, and smaller social networks than their cishet peers. Generalized stress fully mediated the relationship between sexual/gender identity and sleep while sleep hygiene partially mediated the relationship between generalized stress and sleep quality. Social support and COVID-19-related stress did not moderate the relationship between generalized stress and sleep.ConclusionWorse sleep quality in LGBTQ + than cishet adults is explained by differences in generalized stress and sleep hygiene. Stress management and sleep hygiene interventions may help prevent the negative associations between being LGBTQ + and poor sleep quality.
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广义压力和睡眠卫生解释了性/性别认同和睡眠质量之间的关系
一般来说,LGBTQ +人群比他们的异性恋(cishet)同龄人睡眠更差。然而,除了少数群体压力外,缺乏研究不同生活方式/社会心理因素对性/性别认同少数群体与睡眠质量之间负相关关系的影响的文献。目前的研究旨在通过研究广义压力、与covid -19相关的压力、社会支持和睡眠卫生对这种关系的影响,来帮助填补文献中的关键空白。方法在线招募73名参与者(74名LGBTQ+;199份),完成一系列评估睡眠质量、睡眠卫生、广义压力、少数民族压力、新冠肺炎相关压力和社会支持的问卷。结果分析显示,LGBTQ +参与者报告的睡眠质量较差,广义压力和COVID-19压力水平较高,社交网络规模较小。广义应激完全介导性/性别认同与睡眠的关系,而睡眠卫生部分介导广义应激与睡眠质量的关系。社会支持和与covid -19相关的压力并没有调节广义压力与睡眠之间的关系。结论LGBTQ +人群睡眠质量较正常成人差,可能与广义应激和睡眠卫生的差异有关。压力管理和睡眠卫生干预可能有助于防止LGBTQ +和睡眠质量差之间的负面联系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
6.20%
发文量
43
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