计时型
就寝时间
傍晚
医学
睡眠(系统调用)
人口学
可能性
星期几的名称
优势比
心理学
老年学
昼夜节律
逻辑回归
精神科
内科学
物理
哲学
社会学
操作系统
语言学
计算机科学
天文
作者
Arcady A. Putilov,Dmitry S. Sveshnikov,Zarina B. Bakaeva,Elena B. Yakunina,Yuri P. Starshinov,В. И. Торшин,Elena A. Trutneva,М. М. Лапкин,Zhanna N. Lopatskaya,Eugenia O. Gandina,Natalya V. Ligun,Alexandra N. Puchkova,В. Б. Дорохов
标识
DOI:10.1080/07420528.2023.2222797
摘要
The association of insufficient sleep with reduced self-perceived health was previously well established. Moreover, it was sometimes shown that the indicators of poorer health were significantly related to chronotype and weekday-weekend gaps in sleep timing and duration. It remains to be elucidated, however, whether chronotype and these gaps can contribute to the reduced health self-ratings independently from shortened sleep duration or, alternatively, their relationship with health can be simply explained by their association with insufficient sleep on weekdays. In an online survey, we tested whether the self-rated health of university students can be predicted by several individual characteristics of the sleep-wake cycles, such as chronotype, weekday and weekend sleep times, weekday-weekend gap in sleep times, sleepability and wakeability at different times of the day, etc. Responses to a question about general health and to items of several questionnaires for chronobiological assessment were collected from smartphones of 1582 university students (mean age ± standard deviation was 19.5 ± 1.7 y). The results of regression analyses suggested that lower odds of having good self-rated health were significantly associated with an earlier weekday risetime, a later weekday bedtime, and, consequently, a shorter weekday time in bed. After accounting for weekday sleep, self-rated health showed significant association with neither chronotype nor weekday-weekend differences in sleep duration and timing. Besides, the adverse health effects of reduced weekday sleep were independent from the significant adverse effects of several other individual sleep-wake characteristics including poorer nighttime sleepability and lower daytime wakeability. We concluded that university students perceive the negative health impacts of losing sleep by waking up early on weekdays irrespective of their night sleep quality and daytime level of alertness. Their chronotype and weekday-weekend difference in sleep times might not be among significant contributors to this perception. It is of practical importance to consider the reduction of weekday sleep losses among the interventions aimed at preventing sleep and health problems.
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