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232 COVID stress and sleep disturbance among a racially/ethnically diverse sample of adolescents: Analysis from the NESTED study

Authors :
Amy R. Wolfson
Jared M. Saletin
Lisa J. Meltzer
Kyla Wahlstrom
Maksim Tsvetovat
Mary A. Carskadon
Judith A. Owens
Patricia Wong
Sarah M. Honaker
Azizi Seixas
Source :
Sleep. 44:A92-A93
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Introduction Using data from the Nationwide Education and Sleep in TEens During COVID (NESTED) study (N=6,578), we investigated if race/ethnicity (64.6% were White and 35.4% identified as a racial/ethnic minority, mixed, or “other”) and community social vulnerability affected the association between COVID stress and sleep disturbance. Methods Data on sociodemographic factors (age, race, sex, grade, zip code [for neighborhood social vulnerability index, SVI]), COVID-related stress, depression, anxiety, instructional format (online, in-person, or hybrid), and sleep disturbance (PROMIS Pediatric Sleep Disturbance) were captured through an online survey. Descriptive and inferential analyses (Hierarchical Binary Logistic Regression (HBLR), SPSS v. 25) in 4171 adolescents examined associations between sleep disturbance and COVID-related stress, adjusting for race, sex, SVI, grade level, learning format, household density, and mental health factors. Results Sleep disturbance was prevalent among adolescents (89% above average, T-score >50); about two-thirds (64.4%) reported greater stress due to the pandemic. Compared to White (88.5%) adolescents, sleep disturbance was more common in Black (91.2%), Hispanic (90.5%), American Indian/Alaska native (95.1%), and Mixed (92.3%) and less common in Asian (83.9%) adolescents. Chi-square analysis indicated that both race/ethnicity (□2 = 14.96, p Conclusion COVID-related stress and symptoms of depression and anxiety are associated with sleep disturbance. We observed differences in sleep disturbance across racial/ethnic groups and neighborhood social vulnerability strata, for specific racial/ethnic groups. Support (if any) AS was supported by funding from the NIH (K01HL135452, R01HL152453)

Details

ISSN :
15509109 and 01618105
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sleep
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9667b9023be1bc78d336dc84861019e4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab072.231