医学
匹兹堡睡眠质量指数
活动记录
睡眠(系统调用)
观察研究
逻辑回归
睡眠障碍
物理疗法
萧条(经济学)
描述性统计
生活质量(医疗保健)
情感(语言学)
老年学
失眠症
精神科
睡眠质量
护理部
心理学
经济
病理
宏观经济学
内科学
操作系统
统计
沟通
计算机科学
数学
作者
Kristina Aluzaite,Harry Wu,Brent Hyslop,Jessica Young,Michael Schultz,Ben Brockway
出处
期刊:Age and Ageing
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2021-01-06
卷期号:50 (3): 955-962
被引量:7
标识
DOI:10.1093/ageing/afaa292
摘要
Hospital inpatients experience substantial sleep problems that have been linked with worse health outcomes, poor quality of life and the post-hospital syndrome. However, little is known about assessing sleep issues in older hospitalised patients.To conduct an in-depth investigation on hospitalised older adults' sleep challenges and methods of sleep assessment.Cross-sectional observational study.Public hospital inpatient unit.Long-stay hospitalised older adults.Data were collected using validated sleep questionnaires, actigraphy devices and qualitative interviews. Quantitative data were analysed with descriptive statistics, multiple logistic regression and Cohen's Kappa. Qualitative data were analysed with qualitative content analysis; findings compared to the quantitative assessments.We collected data on 33 older long-stay hospital inpatients, who were mean (SD) 80.2(7.4) years old, 57.6% female and were hospitalised following stroke, medical illness and orthopaedic fracture. Mean (SD) total sleep time and actigraphic sleep efficiency were 480.6(73.6) minutes and 81.5(11.2)%, respectively. About, 57.6% were poor sleepers (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index [PSQI]) and 30.8% had indicators of clinical depression/low quality of life (WHO-5 well-being index). Three main themes were identified: "sleep assessment"; "factors that affect sleep"; "expectations of sleep". Bad sleepers were more likely to feel a lack of control over their sleep, while good sleepers spoke about the ability to adjust and accept their circumstances.We found high levels of sleep problems and identified substantial discrepancies between the validated sleep questionnaire and qualitative response data. Our findings indicate that standard assessment tools, such as PSQI, may not be suitable to assess sleep in hospitalised older adults and call for further investigations to build more appropriate methods. Further exploring psychological factors and expectations could potentially lead to novel interventions to improve sleep in this setting.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI