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Journal Article

Citation

Counts CJ, Grubin FC, John-Henderson NA. Sleep Health 2018; 4(3): 301-306.

Affiliation

Montana State University, Department of Psychology, 319 Traphagen Hall, Bozeman, MT 59717, USA. Electronic address: neha.johnhenderson@montana.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.sleh.2018.02.003

PMID

29776625

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Low socioeconomic status (SES) in childhood associates with poor sleep quality in adulthood. Separately, childhood family environments shape health into adulthood. Here, we investigated whether these early life factors independently or interactively inform global sleep quality in college students.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional. PARTICIPANTS: College students at a state university (N = 391). MEASUREMENTS: As a measure of childhood SES, we asked participants to consider their families' socioeconomic standing relative to the rest of the society during their childhood. We used the Risky Family questionnaire to measure adversity and the presence of warmth and affection in the family environment during childhood, and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index as a measure of current global sleep quality. We used linear regressions adjusting for age and sex to examine relationships between childhood SES, risk in childhood family environments, and global sleep quality.

RESULTS: Lower childhood SES and greater risk in childhood family environments independently predicted poor sleep quality. Importantly, in low-risk family environments, there was no significant difference in sleep quality as a function of childhood SES. However, students who were from low childhood SES backgrounds who also reported high levels of risk in their early family environments had the worst sleep quality.

CONCLUSIONS: Findings highlight the importance of considering socioeconomic and family environments in childhood as informants of sleep quality across the lifespan. Compromised sleep quality in college students could affect academic performance and health over time.

Copyright © 2018 National Sleep Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Childhood socioeconomic status; College students; Risky family environments; Sleep quality

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