One-Year Course and Effects of Insomnia in Rural Chinese Adolescents

Mar 2, 2013Sleep

One-year patterns and impacts of insomnia in rural Chinese teenagers

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Abstract

The incidence and persistence rates of insomnia in rural Chinese adolescents were 16.0% and 41.0%, respectively.

  • New cases of insomnia were significantly linked to factors such as age, living in a rural area, daytime napping, high life events, anxiety, and depression.
  • The persistence of insomnia was positively associated with age, female sex, high life events, and depression, but negatively associated with living in a rural area.
  • Insomnia at baseline could predict new cases of depression and anxiety at follow-up, with odds ratios of 1.45 and 1.98, respectively.
  • Cross-lagged analyses supported the bidirectional relationships between insomnia and both depression and anxiety, but not with sleepiness.

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