日常歧视对年轻人自然睡眠健康特征的影响

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-08 DOI:10.1037/hea0001359
Amanda L Tapia, Meredith L Wallace, Brant P Hasler, Jordan Holmes, Sarah L Pedersen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:种族间在睡眠健康方面的不平等有据可查,其部分原因可能与歧视经历有关。然而,急性歧视经历对当晚睡眠健康的影响却未得到充分研究。我们使用生态瞬间评估(EMA)对自然歧视经历进行了量化,并研究了某一天报告的歧视是否会预测当晚的睡眠健康状况:方法:参与者完成基线评估和为期 17 天的 EMA 方案,每天四次发送文本提示以收集歧视经历。每天早上确定七种不同的日常睡眠特征。歧视原因(例如,因为我的种族身份)由参与者报告,并分为任何歧视、种族歧视或非种族歧视。结果包括七种睡眠日记特征。我们为每个睡眠结果和歧视类别拟合了广义线性混合效应模型,并控制了主要的协变量:分析样本包括 116 名自我认同的黑人和白人(48% 为黑人,71% 出生时为女性,平均年龄 = 24.5 岁)。在黑人参与者中,基于种族的歧视与总睡眠时间(TST)减少 0.5 小时有关。在白人中,非种族歧视与总睡眠时间减少 0.6 小时、睡眠偏移提前和睡眠效率降低(部分原因是夜间觉醒次数增多)有关:结论:青壮年在遭受歧视后的晚上睡眠可能会变差,不同类型的歧视会对黑人和白人的睡眠产生不同的影响。未来的研究可能会考虑针对特定日子里遭受歧视的人的不同睡眠脆弱性开发相应的治疗方法。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
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Effect of daily discrimination on naturalistic sleep health features in young adults.

Objective: Racial inequities in sleep health are well documented and may be partially attributable to discrimination experiences. However, the effects of acute discrimination experiences on same-night sleep health are understudied. We quantified naturalistic discrimination experiences captured using ecological momentary assessment (EMA) and examined whether reporting discrimination on a given day predicted sleep health that night.

Method: Participants completed baseline assessments and a 17-day EMA protocol, with text prompts delivered four times daily to collect discrimination experiences. Seven different daily sleep characteristics were ascertained each morning. Discrimination reasons (e.g., because of my racial identity) were reported by participants and categorized into any, racial, or nonracial discrimination. Outcomes included the seven sleep diary characteristics. We fit generalized linear mixed effects models for each sleep outcome and discrimination category, controlling for key covariates.

Results: The analytic sample included 116 self-identified Black and White individuals (48% Black, 71% assigned female at birth, average age = 24.5 years). Among Black participants, race-based discrimination was associated with a 0.5-hr reduction in total sleep time (TST). Among White individuals, nonracial discrimination was associated with a 0.6-hr reduction in TST, an earlier sleep offset, and reduced sleep efficiency (partly attributable to more nighttime awakenings).

Conclusions: Young adults may sleep worse on nights after experiencing discrimination, and different types of discrimination affect different sleep outcomes for Black and White individuals. Future studies may consider developing treatments that account for different sleep vulnerabilities for people experiencing discrimination on a given day. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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