Sleep in university students prior to and during COVID-19 Stay-at-Home orders

Sleep health has multiple dimensions including duration, regularity, timing, and quality [1–4]. The Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak led to Stay-at-Home orders and Social Distancing Requirements in countries throughout the world to limit the spread of COVID-19. We investigated sleep behaviors pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2020-07, Vol.30 (14), p.R797-R798
Hauptverfasser: Wright, Kenneth P., Linton, Sabrina K., Withrow, Dana, Casiraghi, Leandro, Lanza, Shannon M., Iglesia, Horacio de la, Vetter, Celine, Depner, Christopher M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sleep health has multiple dimensions including duration, regularity, timing, and quality [1–4]. The Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak led to Stay-at-Home orders and Social Distancing Requirements in countries throughout the world to limit the spread of COVID-19. We investigated sleep behaviors prior to and during Stay-at-Home orders in 139 university students (aged 22.2 ± 1.7 years old [±SD]) while respectively taking the same classes in-person and remotely. During Stay-at-Home, nightly time in bed devoted to sleep (TIB, a proxy for sleep duration with regard to public health recommendations [5]) increased by ∼30 min during weekdays and by ∼24 mins on weekends and regularity of sleep timing improved by ∼12 min. Sleep timing became later by ∼50 min during weekdays and ∼25 min on weekends, and thus the difference between weekend and weekday sleep timing decreased — hence reducing the amount of social jetlag [6,7]. Further, we find individual differences in the change of TIB devoted to sleep such that students with shorter TIB at baseline before the first COVID-19 cases emerged locally had larger increases in weekday and weekend TIB during Stay-at-Home. The percentage of participants that reported 7 h or more sleep per night, the minimum recommended sleep duration for adults to maintain health [5] — including immune health — increased from 84% to 92% for weekdays during Stay-at-Home versus baseline. Understanding the factors underlying such changes in sleep health behaviors could help inform public health recommendations with the goal of improving sleep health during and following the Stay-at-Home orders of the COVID-19 pandemic. Wright et al. follow the sleeping habits of college students before and during the Covid-19 lockdown, finding that the timing of sleep changed, reducing social jetlag. In addition, the regularity of sleep increased, as did total sleep duration, suggesting life during the pandemic may suggest ways to improve sleep health.
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.022