Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project

Item does not contain fulltext Study objective: Stress as a cause of disturbed sleep is often taken for granted, but the longitudinal evidence is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate new cases of poor sleep as a function of changes in reported work demands, work control, and work preoccupa...

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Published in:Sleep Medicine
Main Authors: Äkerstedt, T., Nordin, M., Alfredsson, L., Westerholm, P., Kecklund, L.G.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2066/102802
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015
id ftunivnijmegen:oai:repository.ubn.ru.nl:2066/102802
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivnijmegen:oai:repository.ubn.ru.nl:2066/102802 2023-12-24T10:23:39+01:00 Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project Äkerstedt, T. Nordin, M. Alfredsson, L. Westerholm, P. Kecklund, L.G. 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/2066/102802 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/2066/102802 doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015 Sleep Medicine, 13, 1, pp. 73-80 Work Health and Performance Article / Letter to editor 2012 ftunivnijmegen https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015 2023-11-29T23:08:53Z Item does not contain fulltext Study objective: Stress as a cause of disturbed sleep is often taken for granted, but the longitudinal evidence is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate new cases of poor sleep as a function of changes in reported work demands, work control, and work preoccupation. Methods: Longitudinal study of change with measures occurring twice within a 5-year interval during a period when the prevalence of impaired sleep was increasing in Sweden. The sample of companies was taken from northern Sweden (Norrland) and included 3637 individuals from the "WOLF Norrland" longitudinal cohort, collected through company health services. Measurement and results: During the measurement period, 16% of those studied developed new cases of impaired sleep. Logistic regressions adjusted for demographics, work environment factors, and disturbed sleep at T1 period one showed a significant increase in new cases for high work demands and high work preoccupation (OR = 1.37; Ci = 1.09-1.72 and OR = 1.80; CI = 1.42-2.28, respectively). The analysis of change in the predictors showed effects of a change from low to high work demands (OR = 1.39; Ci = 1.00-1.95) on new cases of impaired sleep. Consistent high work demands (high at both points) showed a similar increase (OR = 1.49; Ci = 1.06-2.11) but no effect was seen for reduced demands. Change in work preoccupation yielded stronger effects with OR = 2.47 (1.78-2.47) for increased work preoccupation and OR = 3.79 (2.70-5.31) for consistent high work preoccupation. Also, a reduction in work preoccupation was associated with a reduction in new cases of disturbed sleep. Control at work was not related to sleep. Stratification with respect to gender mainly led to fewer significant results (particularly for women) due to larger confidence intervals. Conclusions: It was concluded that self-reported work preoccupation predicts subsequent impairment of sleep and that increased preoccupation is associated with new cases of impaired sleep. Similar, but weaker, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Sweden Radboud University: DSpace Sleep Medicine 13 1 73 80
institution Open Polar
collection Radboud University: DSpace
op_collection_id ftunivnijmegen
language unknown
topic Work
Health and Performance
spellingShingle Work
Health and Performance
Äkerstedt, T.
Nordin, M.
Alfredsson, L.
Westerholm, P.
Kecklund, L.G.
Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project
topic_facet Work
Health and Performance
description Item does not contain fulltext Study objective: Stress as a cause of disturbed sleep is often taken for granted, but the longitudinal evidence is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate new cases of poor sleep as a function of changes in reported work demands, work control, and work preoccupation. Methods: Longitudinal study of change with measures occurring twice within a 5-year interval during a period when the prevalence of impaired sleep was increasing in Sweden. The sample of companies was taken from northern Sweden (Norrland) and included 3637 individuals from the "WOLF Norrland" longitudinal cohort, collected through company health services. Measurement and results: During the measurement period, 16% of those studied developed new cases of impaired sleep. Logistic regressions adjusted for demographics, work environment factors, and disturbed sleep at T1 period one showed a significant increase in new cases for high work demands and high work preoccupation (OR = 1.37; Ci = 1.09-1.72 and OR = 1.80; CI = 1.42-2.28, respectively). The analysis of change in the predictors showed effects of a change from low to high work demands (OR = 1.39; Ci = 1.00-1.95) on new cases of impaired sleep. Consistent high work demands (high at both points) showed a similar increase (OR = 1.49; Ci = 1.06-2.11) but no effect was seen for reduced demands. Change in work preoccupation yielded stronger effects with OR = 2.47 (1.78-2.47) for increased work preoccupation and OR = 3.79 (2.70-5.31) for consistent high work preoccupation. Also, a reduction in work preoccupation was associated with a reduction in new cases of disturbed sleep. Control at work was not related to sleep. Stratification with respect to gender mainly led to fewer significant results (particularly for women) due to larger confidence intervals. Conclusions: It was concluded that self-reported work preoccupation predicts subsequent impairment of sleep and that increased preoccupation is associated with new cases of impaired sleep. Similar, but weaker, ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Äkerstedt, T.
Nordin, M.
Alfredsson, L.
Westerholm, P.
Kecklund, L.G.
author_facet Äkerstedt, T.
Nordin, M.
Alfredsson, L.
Westerholm, P.
Kecklund, L.G.
author_sort Äkerstedt, T.
title Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project
title_short Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project
title_full Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project
title_fullStr Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project
title_full_unstemmed Predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - The WOLF-project
title_sort predicting changes in sleep complaints from baseline values and changes in work demands, work control, and work preoccupation - the wolf-project
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2066/102802
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_source Sleep Medicine, 13, 1, pp. 73-80
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2066/102802
doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sleep.2011.04.015
container_title Sleep Medicine
container_volume 13
container_issue 1
container_start_page 73
op_container_end_page 80
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