| Literature DB >> 33141378 |
Maia Ten Brink1, Hae Yeon Lee2,3, Rachel Manber4, David S Yeager3, James J Gross2.
Abstract
Adults are thought to show a sleep-stress spiral in which greater stress worsens sleep quality, which amplifies stress, which leads to worse sleep. This study examined whether adolescents show a similar spiral, and if so, whether coping self-efficacy-believing one can cope with stress-interrupts the spiral. Temporal dynamics of perceived stress, sleep quality, and coping self-efficacy were tracked in 381 9th graders (49% female, mean age 14.43, age range 14-16) using daily surveys across two school weeks (3184 observations). Though expected associations were evident between individuals, only a unidirectional path was found within individuals from sleep quality to perceived stress via coping self-efficacy. This challenges the conventional bidirectional understanding of sleep-stress relations and suggests coping self-efficacy as an intervention target.Entities:
Keywords: Bayesian; Coping self-efficacy; Dynamic structural equation models; Sleep; Stress; Temporal
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33141378 PMCID: PMC8257057 DOI: 10.1007/s10964-020-01337-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Youth Adolesc ISSN: 0047-2891