Sleep time and pattern of adult individuals in primary care in an Asian urbanized community: A cross-sectional study

Sleep norms vary between individuals, being affected by personal, communal, and socioeconomic factors. Individuals with sleep time which deviate from the population norm are at risks of adverse mental, cardiovascular, and metabolic health. Sleep-related issues are common agenda for consultation in p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medicine (Baltimore) 2016-08, Vol.95 (35), p.e4749-e4749
Hauptverfasser: Tan, Ngiap Chuan, Tan, Mui Suan, Hwang, Siew Wai, Teo, Chia Chia, Lee, Zhi Kang Niccol, Soh, Jing Yao Jonathan, Koh, Yi Ling Eileen, How, Choon How
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sleep norms vary between individuals, being affected by personal, communal, and socioeconomic factors. Individuals with sleep time which deviate from the population norm are at risks of adverse mental, cardiovascular, and metabolic health. Sleep-related issues are common agenda for consultation in primary care. This study aimed to determine the sleep time, pattern, and behavior of multiethnic Asian individuals who attended public primary care clinics in an urban metropolitan city-state.Standardized questionnaires were assistant-administered to adult Asian individuals who visited 2 local public primary care clinics in north-eastern and southern regions of Singapore. The questionnaire included questions on demographic characteristics, self-reported sleep time, patterns, and behavior and those originated from the American National Sleep Foundation Sleep Diary. The data were collated, audited, rectified, and anonymized before being analyzed by the biostatistician. Individuals with 7 h sleep time or longer were deemed getting adequate sleep. Chi-squared or Fisher exact test was used to test the association between the demographic and behavioral variables and sleep time. Next, regression analysis was performed to identify key factors associated with their sleep time.A total of 350 individuals were recruited, with higher proportion of those of Chinese ethnicity reporting adequate sleep. Almost half (48.1%) of those who slept
ISSN:0025-7974
1536-5964
DOI:10.1097/MD.0000000000004749