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Cross-sectional association between outdoor artificial light at night and sleep duration in middle-to-older aged adults: The NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study
Outdoor artificial light at night linked to sleep length in middle-aged and older adults
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Abstract
Higher levels of outdoor artificial light at night (ALAN) are associated with 16% and 25% increases in the likelihood of reporting short sleep in women and men, respectively.
- There is an association between higher ALAN and increased likelihood of reporting very short (<5 h) and short (<7 h) sleep.
- In men, the highest quintile of ALAN is associated with a 25% increase in short sleep likelihood compared to the lowest quintile.
- In women, the highest quintile of ALAN is associated with a 16% increase in short sleep likelihood compared to the lowest quintile.
- Higher ALAN is linked to a decreased likelihood of reporting long sleep (≥9 h) in men.
- The association between ALAN and short sleep appears to be stronger in neighborhoods with higher poverty levels.
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