Literature DB >> 25115947

Socioeconomic Adversity and Women's Sleep: Stress and Chaos as Mediators.

Mona El-Sheikh1, Margaret Keiley1, Erika J Bagley2, Edith Chen3.   

Abstract

We examined income-to-needs ratio, perceived economic well-being, and education and their relations with European and African American women's sleep (n = 219). Sleep was examined through actigraphy and self-reports. Income-to-needs ratio was related to sleep minutes. Perceived economic well-being and education were associated with subjective sleep problems. Perceived stress mediated relations between both income-to-needs ratio and economic well-being and subjective sleep problems. Chaos emerged as a mediator linking income-to-needs ratio and subjective sleep problems. African American women had fewer sleep minutes and lower sleep efficiency than European Americans, and more robust relations between economic well-being and stress was observed for European Americans. Findings highlight the importance of economic adversity for women's sleep and explicate some pathways of risk.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25115947      PMCID: PMC4871111          DOI: 10.1080/15402002.2014.940110

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Sleep Med        ISSN: 1540-2002            Impact factor:   2.964


  53 in total

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