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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to examine daytime sleepiness in a community context. This includes examining sleepiness in a large sample in terms of social/behavioral/environmental predictors and health-related outcomes, as well as examining the role of a sleep education intervention in a smaller sample for promoting healthy beliefs/attitudes about sleepiness.


Clinical Trial Description

Increasing attention has focused on the role of sleep in public health. Approximately 1/3 of Americans sleep ≤6h per night, an amount that has been deemed sub-optimal by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine and Sleep Research Society, the National Sleep Foundation, American Thoracic Society, and the American Heart Association. These consensus statements echo findings from many reviews on this topic. This is alarming, given epidemiologic and experimental research showing that reduced sleep time is associated with a variety of negative health outcomes including obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and mortality. As such, short sleep represents an unmet public health problem. The community-level daytime impacts of insufficient sleep are still not well characterized, though. Previous studies have associated habitual short sleep duration with important adverse cardiometabolic outcomes, including weight gain, obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, stress, etc. They suggest that those that report short sleep may be more likely to experience functional impairments and are less likely to engage in behaviors consistent with a healthy lifestyle. A proposed mechanism of these relationships is that insufficient sleep duration triggers metabolic disturbances and increased immune response, resulting in appetite dysregulation, adverse cardiovascular outcomes, and resultant disease states. In addition to cardiometabolic effects, behavioral and functional consequences of short sleep have been well-documented. For example, short sleepers are more likely to exhibit difficulties initiating and/or maintaining sleep, daytime sleepiness, drowsy driving, and other impairments as a result of sleep loss. Laboratory studies have extensively documented neurocognitive and behavioral effects of sleep loss, including increased objective sleepiness, impaired vigilance using computer-based psychomotor assessments, and deficits in working memory, decision-making, and executive function, as assessed using standardized neuropsychologic and neuroimaging techniques. Although much of the focus on sleep as a public health issue has been on insufficient sleep at night, relatively little has focused on the role of daytime sleepiness. The investigator's previous work has shown that the prevalence of daytime tiredness is approximately 18-19% among working-age adults in the US. This is in line with other studies, which have estimated the population burden of excessive daytime sleepiness to be between 10-25%. Daytime sleepiness is a well-documented result of sleep deprivation, but it can also be a result of sleep apnea, sleep fragmentation, and other causes. The role of daytime sleepiness as an important dimension of sleep that impacts public health has not been sufficiently explored. The present study aims to examine daytime sleepiness in a large community sample in terms of social/behavioral/environmental predictors and health-related outcomes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04176042
Study type Interventional
Source University of Arizona
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 18, 2019
Completion date June 30, 2020

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