| Literature DB >> 29357698 |
Annika Dimitrov1, Ilya M Veer1, Julia Kleeblatt1, Florian Seyfarth1, Till Roenneberg2, Marcus Ising3, Manfred Uhr4, Martin E Keck3, Achim Kramer1,5, Maximilian Berger1, Lara von Koch6, Henrik Walter1, Mazda Adli1.
Abstract
Past studies examining the effect of chronotype and social jetlag on psychological well-being have been inconsistent so far. Here, we recruited participants from the general population and enquired about their natural sleeping behavior, sleep quality, depressive symptoms, and perceived stress. Partial correlations were computed between sleep variables and indicators of psychological well-being, controlling for age and sex. Less sleep during work days was found a good indicator for impairments in psychological well-being. In exploratory follow-up analyses, the same correlations were calculated within groups of early, intermediate, and late chronotype. We observed that the composition of the sample in terms of chronotype influenced whether associations between sleep variables and psychological well-being could be observed, a finding that is advised to be taken into account in future studies.Entities:
Keywords: chronotype; depression; sleep; stress; well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29357698 DOI: 10.1177/1359105317751618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Psychol ISSN: 1359-1053