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Prevalence of Sleep Disruption and Determinants of Sleepiness in a Cohort of Italian Hospital Physicians: The PRESOMO Study

Overview
Journal J Sleep Res
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2021 Jun 28
PMID 34180103
Citations 1
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Abstract

Nightshift work can cause daytime somnolence and decreased alertness, and can increase risk of medical errors, occupational injuries and car accidents. We used a structured questionnaire, including the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS), to assess the prevalence and the determinants of sleep disruption in 268 Italian University hospital physicians from Cagliari (N = 57), Milan (N = 180) and Pisa (N = 31), who participated in the multicentre study on the prevalence of sleep disturbance among hospital physicians (PRESOMO); 198 of them (74%) were engaged in nightshift work. We explored the association between history of nightshift work and poor sleep quality and daytime somnolence with multivariate logistic regression, adjusting by personal and lifestyle covariates. Age, female gender, taking medication interfering with sleep and an elevated ESS score were significant predictors of poor sleep quality and daytime somnolence. Nightshift work was associated with a higher prevalence of unrestful sleep (84% versus 70%; odds ratio [OR] = 2.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.18-5.05) and daytime dozing (57% versus 35%; OR = 1.9, 95% CI 1.03-3.64), with an upward trend by years of engagement in nightshift work for both conditions (p = .043 and 0.017, respectively), and by number of nightshifts/year for unrestful sleep (p = .024). Such an association was not detected with the ESS scale. Our results suggest that nightshift work significantly affects sleep quality and daytime somnolence in hospital physicians, who might underestimate their daytime dozing problem, when asked to subjectively scale it.

Citing Articles

Prevalence of sleep disruption and determinants of sleepiness in a cohort of Italian hospital physicians: The PRESOMO study.

Lecca R, Bonanni E, Battaglia E, Maestri M, Figorilli M, Congiu P J Sleep Res. 2021; 31(1):e13377.

PMID: 34180103 PMC: 9285774. DOI: 10.1111/jsr.13377.

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