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VOLUME 34, ISSUE 04

SOCIOECONOMIC AND OCCUPATIONAL FACTORS IN SLEEP DURATION
Socioeconomic Status, Occupational Characteristics, and Sleep Duration in African/Caribbean Immigrants and US White Health Care Workers

Karen A. Ertel, ScD1; Lisa F. Berkman, PhD2; Orfeu M. Buxton, PhD3

1Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA ; 2Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, Cambridge MA ; 3Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA



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Study Objectives:

o advance our understanding of the interplay of socioeconomic factors, occupational exposures, and race/ethnicity as they relate to sleep duration. We hypothesize that non Hispanic African/Caribbean immigrant employees in long term health care have shorter sleep duration than non Hispanic white employees, and that low education, low income, and occupational exposures including night work and job strain account for some of the African/Caribbean immigrant–white difference in sleep duration.

Design:

Cross sectional

Setting:

Four extended care facilities in Massachusetts, United States

Participants:

340 employees in extended care facilities

Measurements and Results:

Sleep duration was assessed with wrist actigraphy for a mean of 6.3 days. In multivariable regression modeling controlling for gender and age, African/Caribbean immigrants slept 64.4 fewer minutes (95% CI: −81.0, −47.9) per night than white participants; additional control for education and income reduced the racial gap to 50.9 minutes (−69.2, −32.5); additional control for the occupational factors of hours worked per week and working the night shift reduced the racial gap to 37.7 minutes (−57.8, −17.6).

Conclusions:

his study provides support for the hypothesis that socioeconomic and occupational characteristics explain some of the African/ Caribbean immigrant–white difference in sleep duration in the United States, especially among health care workers.

Citation:

Ertel KA; Berkman LF; Buxton OM. Socioeconomic status, occupational characteristics, and sleep duration in African/Caribbean immi grants and US white health care workers. SLEEP 2011; 34(4):509-518.

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