12 research outputs found

    Integration of immigrants into a new culture is related to poor sleep quality

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    Background: This article reports on the relationship between cultural influences on life style, coping style, and sleep in a sample of female Portuguese immigrants living in Germany. Sleep quality is known to be poorer in women than in men, yet little is known about mediating psychological and sociological variables such as stress and coping with stressful life circumstances. Migration constitutes a particularly difficult life circumstance for women if it involves differing role conceptions in the country of origin and the emigrant country. Methods: The study investigated sleep quality, coping styles and level of integration in a sample of Portuguese (N = 48) and Moroccan (N = 64) immigrant women who took part in a structured personal interview. Results: Sleep quality was poor in 54% of Portuguese and 39% of Moroccan women, which strongly exceeds reports of sleep complaints in epidemiologic studies of sleep quality in German women. Reports of poor sleep were associated with the degree of adoption of a German life style. Women who had integrated more into German society slept worse than less integrated women in both samples, suggesting that non-integration serves a protective function. An unusually large proportion of women preferred an information-seeking (monitoring) coping style and adaptive coping. Poor sleep was related to high monitoring in the Portuguese but not the Moroccan sample. Conclusion: Sleep quality appears to be severely affected in women with a migration background. Our data suggest that non-integration may be less stressful than integration. This result points to possible benefits of non-integration. The high preference for an information-seeking coping style may be related to the process of migration, representing the attempt at regaining control over an uncontrollable and stressful life situation

    Schlaflos in Frankfurt : wenn die Nacht zum Fluch wird

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    Neueren Schätzungen zufolge leiden bis zu 15 Prozent der bundesdeutschen Bevölkerung unter klinisch bedeutsamen Schlafstörungen. Die "Internationale Klassifikation der Schlafstörungen" (ICSD-R) umfasst insgesamt 88 Störungen, die sich vier Oberkategorien zuordnen lassen: "Dyssomnien" (Schlafstörungen, die entweder durch Ein- oder Durchschlafstörungen oder übermäßige Schläfrigkeit gekennzeichnet sind), "Parasomnien" (zum Beispiel Schlafwandeln oder Sprechen im Schlaf), "Schlafstörungen bei körperlichen oder psychiatrischen Erkrankungen" sowie "Vorgeschlagene Schlafstörungen" (diagnostische Kategorien, die derzeit noch näher erforscht werden)

    Current treatment of comorbid insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea with CBTI and PAP-therapy : a systematic review

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    Insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are often both present in patients with sleep- disordered-breathing. The coexistence of the two disorders shows an increase in cumulative morbidity and an overall greater illness severity. There is still considerable controversy regarding management decisions in this group of patients. This systematic review focused on more recent evidence regarding treatment of patients presenting with both clinical entities of comorbid insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea in terms of their management, especially using combinations of positive airway pressure (PAP, namely aPAP, cPAP, adaptive servo-ventilation[ASV]) and CBTi as well as each one of these two modalities alone. As a conclusion it is necessary to specifically target distinct combinations of both insomnia (initial, middle, late) and OSA (mild, moderate, severe) phenotypes. The present review gives reason to assume that both CBTi and PAP-therapy are necessary. However, it appears that distinct treatment patterns may suit different COMISA phenotypes

    Complaints of sleep disturbances are associated with cardiovascular disease : results from the Gutenberg Health Study

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    BACKGROUND: Despite their high prevalence, sleep disorders often remain unrecognized and untreated because of barriers to assessment and management. The aims of the present study were to examine associations of complaints of sleep disturbances with cardiovascular disease, related risk factors, and inflammation in the community and to determine the contribution of sleep disturbances to self-perceived physical health. METHOD: The sample consists of n = 10.000 participants, aged 35 to 74 years of a population based community sample in Germany. Cross-sectional associations of complaints of sleep disturbances with cardiovascular risk factors and disease, biomarkers of inflammation, depression, anxiety, and physical health status were analyzed. RESULTS: 19% of our sample endorsed clinically significant sleep disturbances. In the unadjusted analyses severity of sleep disturbances increased with female sex, low socioeconomic status, living without a partnership, cardiovascular disease, depression, anxiety, poor physical health, increased levels of C-reactive protein and fibrinogen. After multivariate adjustment robust associations with coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction and dyslipidemia remained. Complaints of sleep disturbances were strong and independent contributors to self-perceived poor physical health beyond depression, anxiety and medical disease burden. CONCLUSIONS: Given the high prevalence of complaints of sleep disturbances and their strong impact on health status, increased efforts should be undertaken for their identification and treatment
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