| Literature DB >> 31632231 |
Nicola Magnavita1,2, Enrico Di Stasio1,2, Ilaria Capitanelli1, Erika Alessandra Lops1, Francesco Chirico1, Sergio Garbarino1,3.
Abstract
Background: This systematic review with meta-analysis was carried out to study the relationship between workplace violence and sleep problems.Entities:
Keywords: bullying; neurophysiology; psychological trauma; sleep disorders; sleep problems; sleep quality; stress; workplace violence
Year: 2019 PMID: 31632231 PMCID: PMC6779772 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.00997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Article selection algorithm (PRISMA 2009).
Studies on workplace violence and sleep disorders.
| Zahid et al., | Kuwait | Cross-sectional | 101 | 2/10 | A&E doctors | Physical and verbal | n.s. | Insomnia | n.s. | Exposure was associated with insomnia and other symptoms | 86% of the exposed doctors reported symptoms, including insomnia. | ||
| Vartia, | Finland | Cross-sectional | 949 | 4/10 | General | Bullying | 12 mths | LIPT | Use of drugs | n.s. | Exposure was associated with use of sleep-inducing drugs | Prevalence of bullying: 10%. Prevalence of use of sleep-inducing drugs among bullied: 13% | |
| Atawneh et al., | Kuwait | Cross-sectional | 81 | 2/10 | Hospital nurses | Physical and verbal | n.s. | sleeplessness | n.s. | Exposure was associated with sleeplessness | Prevalence of WV: 86%. Prevalence of sleeplessness: 73%. | ||
| Arthur et al., | USA | Cross-sectional | 1,131 | 3/10 | Mental health providers | Physical and verbal | n.s. | Being unable to sleep | n.s. | Exposure was associated with insomnia | Prevalence of WV: 61%. Prevalence of sleeplessness 9.0% | ||
| Eriksen et al., | Norway | Prospective | 4,471 | 5/9 | Nurse aids | Physical and verbal | 3 mths | QPSNORDIC | Sleep quality | 3 mths | 1 item from the BNSQ | Exposure to violence and threats was associated with poor sleep quality (OR = 1.19; 95% CI = 1.01–1.40). | Prevalence of WV, 41.08% Prevalence of “poor sleep” at baseline: 29.7%, at follow-up: 37.3%. |
| Niedhammer et al., | France | Cross-sectional | 7,694 | 7/10 | General | Bullying | 12 mths | LIPT | Sleep disturbances | n.s. | Exposure was associated with sleep disturbances in men (aOR = 4.40; 95% CI = 3.35–5.78) and women (aOR = 3.83 95% CI = 3.12–4.70) | Prevalence of bullying, 9.91% Prevalence of bullied people with sleep disturbances: 4.62%. | |
| Takaki et al., | Japan | Cross sectional | 2,500 | 5/10 | General | Bullying | 6 mths | NAQ | Sleep disturbances | 1 mth | PSQI | WV plays a mediating role in the relationship between job strain and sleep disturbances | Prevalence of WV: 81.2% No prevalence data on sleep problems |
| Rodriguez-Munoz and Notelaers, | Belgium | Cross-sectional | 4,068 | 3/10 | General | Bullying | 6 mths | NAQ | Sleep quality | n.s. | Exposure was associated with poor sleep quality | No prevalence data | |
| Lallukka et al., | Finland | Prospective | 7,332 | 5/9 | General | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep problems | n.s. | Exposure was associated with sleep problems (OR = 1.69; 95% CI = 1.30–2.20 in female) (OR = 3.17; 95% CI = 1.85–5.43 in male). | Prevalence of bullying at baseline: 22.85%. Prevalence of sleep problems at baseline 20.2%; at follow-up: 24.8%. | ||
| Bambi et al., | Italy | Cross-sectional | 444 | 5/10 | A&E nurses | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep disturbances | n.s. | Exposure was associated with complaints including sleep disturbances | 81.6% nurses were victims of lateral hostilities | ||
| Ziemska et al., | Poland | Cross-sectional | 1,096 | 2/10 | University workers | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep disorders | n.s. | Exposure was associated with sleep disorders (OR = 3.43; 95% CI = 2.30–5.13) | Prevalence of exposure to bullying: 19.34%. Prevalence of sleep disorders: 10.94%. Prevalence of exposed people with sleep disorders: 11% | ||
| Park et al., | Korea | Cross-sectional | 10,039 | 7/10 | General | Physical, verbal, and sexual | 12 mths | Sleep problems | n.s. | Exposure to physical (aOR = 1.98; 95% CI = 1.06–3.68) or sexual violence (aOR = 3.47; 95% CI = 1.77–6.81), was associated with sleep problems | Prevalence of WV 6.9% Prevalence of sleep problems 5.1% (95% CI 4.7–5.5%). | ||
| Slopen and Williams, | USA | Cross-sectional | 2,983 | 7/10 | General | Verbal (discrimination). | n.s. | Perceived Racism Scale, adapted | Sleep duration and difficulties | 4 wks | Exposure to workplace harassment was associated with shorter sleep duration (B = −0.09) and sleep difficulties (B = 0.04) | No prevalence data | |
| Tutenges et al., | Denmark | Cross-sectional | 151 | 2/10 | Bouncers | Physical and verbal | n.s. | Trouble sleeping | 12 mths | Exposure was associated with sleep problems | Prevalence of WV 96%. Prevalence of sleeping problems 50.4% | ||
| Miranda et al., | USA | Prospective | 344 | 5/9 | Home Care | Physical assaults | 3 mths | Pain interference with sleep | n.s. | Exposure was associated with pain interfering with sleep at baseline (aPR = 1.8; 95% CI = 1.2–2.6) and at 2-year follow-up (PR = 2.2; 95% CI = 1.5–3.0) | Prevalence of WV: 55% at baseline, 25% in all three periods (“persistent violence”). Pain interfering with sleep at baseline: 42% and in 3 surveys: 41%. | ||
| Kostev et al., | Germany | Case-control | 2,625 | 5/9 | General | Mthbbing | n.s. | Sleep disorder (ICD-10) | 12 mths | Exposure was associated with sleep disorders (OR = 2.4, | Prevalence of sleep disorders: 13.3% in workers reporting mobbing, 5.1% in workers without mobbing. | ||
| Min et al., | Korea | Cross-sectional | 7,007 | 6/10 | General | Verbal & sexual | 12 mths | Sleeping problems | n.s. | Exposure was associated with sleeping problems (male: PR = 2.3; 95%; CI = 1.7–3.2; female: 3.0; 95% CI = 1.9–4.7). | Prevalence of WV 7.2%. Prevalence of sleep problems: 5.12% (male: 6%, female: 4.3%) | ||
| Ovayolu et al., | Turkey | Cross-sectional | 260 | 2/10 | Hospital Nurses | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep disorders | n.s. | Exposure was associated with sleep disorders | Prevalence of workplace bullying: 3.1%. Prevalence of health or sleeping problems: 66.2%. | ||
| Hansen et al., | Denmark | Prospective | 2,919 | 5/9 | General | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep problems | 3 monnths | KSQ | Exposure was associated with poor sleep quality (3.56; 95% CI = 1.09;11.59) | Prevalence of bullying 12.16% | |
| Hanson et al., | USA | Cross-sectional | 1,214 | 5/10 | Home Care | Physical, verbal, and sexual | 12 mths | General sleeping troubles | n.s. | 1 item from COPSOQ | Exposure was associated with sleep problems | Prevalence of WV: 61.3%. No prevalence data on sleep problems | |
| Magee et al., | Australia | Cross-sectional | 1,454 | 6/10 | General | Bullying | 6 mths | NAQ | Sleep quality | 1 mth | PSQI | Dose-response relationship between the number of WV episodes and sleep quality. | Prevalence of frequent bullying: 8.4%. No prevalence data on sleep problems |
| Bonde et al., | Denmark | Prospective | 7,502 | 4/9 | General | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep quality | 3 mths | KSQ | Bullying at baseline significantly predicted sleep disturbance (ORa = 1.29; 95% CI = 0.9–1.7) | Prevalence of bullying, baseline 7.4% Prevalence of sleep problems, baseline 10.3% Prevalence of sleep problems in bullied people 15.5% | |
| Yoo et al., | Korea | Cross-sectional | 25,138 | 3/10 | General | Physical, verbal, and sexual | 1 mth | Sleep disturbances | 12 mths | WV was associated with sleep disturbance (OR = 3.773; 95% CI = 3.058–4.655). Lateral violence was associated with sleep disturbances (OR = 5.688; 95% CI = 4.189–7.723) | Prevalence of WV 6.0% Prevalence of sleep disturbance: 2.4% | ||
| Nabe-Nielsen et al., | Denmark | Prospective | 7,650 | 5/9 | General | Bullying, unwanted sexual attention | n.s. | Disturbed sleep | 3 mths | KSQ | Disturbed sleep mediated 12.8% (95% CI = 8.1–19.8) of the association between bullying and long-term sickness absence, and 8.5% (95% CI = −0.45 to 37.1) of the association between unwanted sexual attention and long-term sickness absence | Prevalence of bullying varies across studies (WHB, 2006 and 2008; PRISME, 2007 and 2009): from 5 to 10% and unwanted sexual attention from 1 to 4%. No prevalence data on sleep problems | |
| Hansen et al., | Denmark | Prospective | 3,278 | 5/9 | General | Bullying | n.s. | Sleep problems | 3 mths | KSQ | Exposure at baseline was associated with early awakening (β = 0.06; 95% CI = 0.01–0.11) and lack of restful sleep (β = 0.07; 95% CI = 0.02–0.11) at follow-up. | Prevalence of bullying 9.20% | |
| Pitney et al., | USA | Mixed-methods. | 567 | 6/10 | Athletic trainers | Bullying | 6 mths | NAQ | Sleep disturbances | n.s. | SSI | Exposure was associated with sleep disturbances | Prevalence of bullying: 7.8%. |
| Vedaa et al., | Norway | Prospective | 799 | 4/9 | Shift working nurses | Bullying | 6 mths | NAQ | Sleep problems | 1 mth | BIS | Exposure predicted increased symptoms of insomnia over time. | No prevalence data |
| Acquadro Maran et al., | Italy | Cross-sectional | 1,842 | 4/10 | Hospital | Stalking | n.s. | Stalking Questionnaire | Sleep disorders | n.s. | Stalking was significantly associated with sleep disorder. | Prevalence of stalking 13.9%. Prevalence of sleep disorders among victims of stalking: 50.7% | |
| Gluschkoff et al., | Finland | Prospective | 4,988 | 5/9 | Teachers | Physical and verbal | n.s. | Sleep disturbances | 4 wks | JSPS | Exposure was associated with an increased rate of sleep disorders (RR 1.32; 95% CI = 1.15–1.52). | Prevalence of WV: 33% | |
| Sun et al., | China | Cross-sectional | 3,016 | 3/10 | Hospital | Physical, verbal and sexual | n.s. | Sleep quality | n.s. | Exposure was negatively correlated with sleep quality ( | Prevalence of WV: 83.4%. | ||
| Pekurinen et al., | Finland | Cross-sectional | 5,228 | 5/10 | Nurses | Physical and verbal | 12 mths | Sleep disturbances | 4 wks | JSPS | Psychiatric nurses who experienced WV were less likely to suffer from sleep disturbances compared to nurses working in medical, surgical and emergency settings (OR = 0.65, | Prevalence of exposure to aggression by patients: 41%. Prevalence of sleep disturbances: 49%. | |
| Zhang et al., | China | Cross-sectional | 1,024 | 2/10 | Nurses | Physical, verbal and sexual | 12 mths | Sleep quality | n.s. | WV exposure was negatively associated with sleep quality ( | Prevalence of WV: 75.4%. | ||
| Karhula et al., | Finland | Cross-sectional | 9,312 | 5/10 | Nurses | Physical and verbal | 12 mths | Sleep difficulties | 4 wks | Permanent night workers reported difficulties in falling asleep more often than day and shift workers, but reported difficulties in maintaining sleep less often than other colleagues | Prevalence of WV: 53.90 Prevalence of insufficient sleep: 24.18% | ||
| Thurston et al., | USA | Cross-sectional | 304 | 5/10 | General, women | Sexual harassment and assault | Longlife | BTQ | Sleep quality | 1 mth | PSQI | Exposure to Sexual Harassment was associated with poor sleep (aOR = 1.89; 95% CI = 1.05–3.42). Exposure to Sexual assault was associated with poor sleep (aOR = 2.15; 95% CI = 1.23–3.77) | Prevalence of sexual harassment: 19%. Prevalence of sexual assault: 22%. |
A&E, Accidents and Emergency; n.s., not specified; mths, months; wks, weeks; LIPT, Leymann Inventory of Psychological Terror; NAQ, Negative Acts Questionnaire; BTQ, Brief Trauma Questionnaire; QPSNORDIC, General Nordic questionnaire for psychological and social factors at work; JSPS, Jenkins Sleep Problems Scale; KSQ, Karolinska Sleep Questionnaire; BIS, Bergen Insomnia Scale; PSQI, Pittsburgh Sleep Questionnaire Index; BNSQ, Basic Nordic Sleep Questionnaire; SSI, Semi-structured interviews.
: Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Form for Cohort studies score (maximum score = 9) and Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale for Case-Control/Cross-sectional studies score (maximum score = 10).
Selected for meta-analysis.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of the association of workplace violence and sleep problems. Forest plot.
Figure 3Meta-analysis of the association of workplace violence and sleep problems. Funnel plot.
Figure 4Conceptual diagram depicting the effect of WV stress on sleep problems across individual features (gender, genetic, environmental) with sleep reactivity, hyperarousal, and the alterations of two brain circuits genetically heritable (default mode circuit—DMN and the negative affective circuits—NA). Connectivity between nodes of the DMN, NA and other networks implicated in mood and anxiety disorders fluctuate as a function of sleep stage. Different sleep problems could induce hyper-reactivity or hypo-connectivity of different nodes of circuits manly mPFC-amygdala that, in turn, contribute to the development and maintenance of emotional distress that underlies the maladaptive behaviors commonly observed in anxiety disorders, including increased negative bias, increased threat responsivity, and poor emotional regulation. Moreover, subjects with sleep problems, with a genetic predisposition and an epigenetic modification could be involved in hostile and aggressive behavior (maladaptive behaviors) at workplace for a loss of emotional control and regulation of aggression (dashed line).