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Owls and larks do not exist: COVID-19 quarantine sleep habits

Authors :
Yulia Roitblat
Jacob Burger
Michael Vaiman
Liliia Nehuliaieva
Noa Buchris
Michael Shterenshis
Orit Rome
Leor Sinai
Rachelle Sevitt
Ayela Meroody
Marnie Nadolne
Philip Shilco
Geoffrey P. Jacobs
Abby Sosnow
Maya Foonberg
Elijah Faridnia
Ariel Emrani
Liana Hiekali
Candice Shohed
Taylor Golshan
Source :
BASE-Bielefeld Academic Search Engine, Sleep Medicine

Abstract

Background The coronavirus pandemic presented a unique opportunity to study the daily temporal patterns and sleep habits of humans. The question to be explored was: Are there discernible differences in sleep between the normal operational environment and the stay-at-home condition? Methods This international prospective study analyzed results from the sleep-wake patterns questionnaire, daily logs, and interviews. Surveys were administered to the healthy volunteers (age 15–60 y) with stay-at-home for a month or more, without previous sleep disorders and mood-related complaints; volunteers were not involved in online education/work daily timetable-related activities. Results We analyzed 3787 subjects with average stay-at-home of 65 ± 9 days. The most significant changes in sleep occurred during the first ten days when the difference between weekdays and weekends disappeared and changes occurred in napping habits. The majority of the participants (66.8%) shifted toward eveningness when the self-selected sleep was possible and 1869 volunteers appeared to be owls (49.4%), 823 (21.7%) exercised “typical” sleep, 478 (12.6%) were larks, and 617 (16.3%) participants were completely desynchronized to the end of stay-at-home. In addition, 497 participants (13.1%) alternated their sleep habits. The most of the desynchronized participants (n = 414) were older than 50 years (age correlation r = 0.80), and predominantly males (n = 297, r = 0.76). Conclusion In self-selected sleep conditions, the timing of sleep and sleep habits significantly differ from those of socially and economically fixed daily routine conditions. The changes in daily temporal patterns of humans during a prolonged stay-at-home situation indicate that human sleep habits may change according to existing living conditions.<br />Highlights • COVID-19 pandemic presented a unique opportunity to study human chronotypes. • We analyzed 3787 subjects with average stay-at-home of 65 ± 9 days. • The majority of the participants (66.8%) shifted toward eveningness at stay-at-home. • In addition, 497 participants (13.1%) alternated their sleep habits. • Human chronotypes may change according to existing living conditions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BASE-Bielefeld Academic Search Engine, Sleep Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....24969940afc3f6d46db0aa3ff0f59254
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2020.09.003