Loretta R Cain-Shields1, Dayna A Johnson, LáShauntá Glover, Mario Sims. 1. From the Department of Data Science, John D Bower School of Population Health (Cain-Shields), University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi; Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health (Johnson), Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia; Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health (Glover), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; and Department of Medicine, School of Medicine (Sims), University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to assess the association between changes in goal-striving stress (GSS) and changes in sleep duration in African Americans (AAs) and to determine if the association varies by sex, age, and/or educational attainment. METHODS: We completed a longitudinal analysis using examination 1 (2000-2004, n = 5306) and examination 3 (2009-2013, n = 3819) data from the Jackson Heart Study, with a final sample of 3500. Changes in GSS and changes in sleep duration were calculated by subtracting examination 1 GSS from examination 3 GSS. Mean differences (β [standard error]) between changes in GSS and changes in sleep duration were assessed using linear regression models that adjusted for length of follow-up, sociodemographics, health behaviors/risk factors, and stressors. RESULTS: In the fully adjusted models, the increase in GSS from examination 1 to examination 3 was associated with a decrease in sleep duration (in minutes) from examination 1 to examination 3 in the overall cohort (β = -7.72 [2.44], p < .002), in high school graduates (β = -21.23 [5.63], p < .001), and in college graduates (β = -7.57 [3.75], p = .044) but not in those with less than a high school education (β = 1.49 [8.35], p = .86) or those who attended college but did not graduate (β = 0.44 [4.94], p = .93). CONCLUSIONS: Changes in GSS were inversely associated with changes in sleep duration over a mean period of 8 years in AA subgroups. Interventions that reduce stress related to goal striving should be considered to help improve sleep health in AAs.
OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to assess the association between changes in goal-striving stress (GSS) and changes in sleep duration in African Americans (AAs) and to determine if the association varies by sex, age, and/or educational attainment. METHODS: We completed a longitudinal analysis using examination 1 (2000-2004, n = 5306) and examination 3 (2009-2013, n = 3819) data from the Jackson Heart Study, with a final sample of 3500. Changes in GSS and changes in sleep duration were calculated by subtracting examination 1 GSS from examination 3 GSS. Mean differences (β [standard error]) between changes in GSS and changes in sleep duration were assessed using linear regression models that adjusted for length of follow-up, sociodemographics, health behaviors/risk factors, and stressors. RESULTS: In the fully adjusted models, the increase in GSS from examination 1 to examination 3 was associated with a decrease in sleep duration (in minutes) from examination 1 to examination 3 in the overall cohort (β = -7.72 [2.44], p < .002), in high school graduates (β = -21.23 [5.63], p < .001), and in college graduates (β = -7.57 [3.75], p = .044) but not in those with less than a high school education (β = 1.49 [8.35], p = .86) or those who attended college but did not graduate (β = 0.44 [4.94], p = .93). CONCLUSIONS: Changes in GSS were inversely associated with changes in sleep duration over a mean period of 8 years in AA subgroups. Interventions that reduce stress related to goal striving should be considered to help improve sleep health in AAs.
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