Poor sleep quality and insufficient sleep of a collegiate student-athlete population
Poor and inadequate sleep negatively impact cognitive and physical functioning and may also affect sports performance. The study aim is to examine sleep quality, sleep duration, and daytime sleepiness in collegiate student-athletes across a wide range of sports. Questionnaire. University setting. 62...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sleep health 2018-06, Vol.4 (3), p.251-257 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Poor and inadequate sleep negatively impact cognitive and physical functioning and may also affect sports performance. The study aim is to examine sleep quality, sleep duration, and daytime sleepiness in collegiate student-athletes across a wide range of sports.
Questionnaire.
University setting.
628 athletes across 29 varsity teams at Stanford University.
Athletes completed a questionnaire inquiring about sleep quality via a modified Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), sleep duration, and daytime sleepiness via Epworth Sleepiness Scale. Sleep quality on campus and while traveling for competition was rated on a 10-point scale.
Collegiate athletes were classified as poor sleepers (PSQI 5.38 ± 2.45), and 42.4% of athletes experience poor sleep quality (reporting PSQI global scores >5). Athletes reported lower sleep quality on campus than when traveling for competition (7.1 vs 7.6, P< .001). Inadequate sleep was demonstrated by 39.1% of athletes that regularly obtain |
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ISSN: | 2352-7218 2352-7226 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.sleh.2018.02.005 |