• Med Decis Making · Mar 2010

    Markov processes for the prediction of aircraft noise effects on sleep.

    • Mathias Basner and Uwe Siebert.
    • German Aerospace Center, Institute of Areospace Medicine, Cologne, Germany. mathias.basner@dlr.de
    • Med Decis Making. 2010 Mar 1; 30 (2): 275-89.

    BackgroundAircraft noise disturbs sleep and impairs recuperation. Authorities plan to expand Frankfurt airport.ObjectiveTo quantitatively assess the effects of a traffic curfew (11 PM to 5 AM) at Frankfurt Airport on sleep structure.DesignExperimental sleep study; polysomnography for 13 consecutive nights.SettingSleep laboratory. Subjects. 128 healthy subjects, mean age (SD) 38 (13) years, range 19 to 65, 59% female. Intervention. Exposure to aircraft noise via loudspeakers.MeasurementsA 6-state Markov state transition sleep model was used to simulate 3 noise scenarios with first-order Monte Carlo simulations: 1) 2005 traffic at Frankfurt Airport, 2) as simulation 1 but flights between 11 PM and 5 AM cancelled, and 3) as simulation 2, with flights between 11 PM and 5 AM from simulation 1 rescheduled to periods before 11 PM and after 5 AM. Probabilities for transitions between sleep stages were estimated with autoregressive multinomial logistic regression.ResultsCompared to a night without curfew, models indicate small improvements in sleep structure in nights with curfew, even if all traffic is rescheduled to periods before and after the curfew period. For those who go to bed before 10:30 PM or after 1 AM, this benefit is likely to be offset by the expected increase of air traffic during late evening and early morning hours. Limitations. Limited ecologic validity due to laboratory setting and subject sample.ConclusionsAccording to the decision analysis, it is unlikely that the proposed curfew at Frankfurt Airport substantially benefits sleep structure. Extensions of the model could be used to evaluate or propose alternative air traffic regulation strategies for Frankfurt Airport.

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