• Sleep medicine · Dec 2020

    Sleep quality during the COVID-19 pandemic: not one size fits all.

    • Desana Kocevska, Tessa F Blanken, Van SomerenEus J WEJWNetherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Department of Sleep and Cognition, the Netherlands; Departments of Integrative Neurophysiology and Psychiatry, Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research, VU University, Amsterdam UMC, Amst, and Lara Rösler.
    • Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, Department of Sleep and Cognition, the Netherlands.
    • Sleep Med. 2020 Dec 1; 76: 86-88.

    BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic imposes a long period of stress on people worldwide and has been shown to significantly affect sleep duration across different populations. However, decreases in sleep quality rather than duration are associated with adverse mental health effects. Additionally, the one third of the general population suffering from poor sleep quality was underrepresented in previous studies. The current study aimed to elucidate effects of the COVID -19 pandemic on sleep quality across different levels of pre-pandemic sleep complaints and as a function of affect and worry.MethodParticipants (n = 667) of the Netherlands Sleep Registry (NSR) were invited for weekly online assessment of the subjective severity of major stressors, insomnia, sleep times, distress, depression, and anxiety using validated scales.AnalysisTo investigate the overall impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the sleep quality of people with and without a history of insomnia, we performed a mixed model analysis using pre-pandemic insomnia severity, negative affect, and worry as predictors.ResultsThe effect of COVID -19 on sleep quality differs critically across participants, and depends on the pre-pandemic sleep quality. Interestingly, a quarter of people with pre-pandemic (clinical) insomnia experienced a meaningful improvement in sleep quality, whereas 20% of pre-pandemic good sleepers experienced worse sleep during the lockdown measures. Additionally, changes in sleep quality throughout the pandemic were associated with negative affect and worry.ConclusionOur data suggests that there is no uniform effect of the lockdown on sleep quality. COVID-19 lockdown measures more often worsened sleep complaints in pre-pandemic good sleepers, whereas a subset of people with pre-pandemic severe insomnia symptoms underwent a clinically meaningful alleviation of symptoms in our sample.Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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