The association of acculturative stress with self-reported sleep disturbance and sleep duration among Asian Americans

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Abstract

Study Objectives: This study aims to examine associations between acculturative stress - defined as the psychological impact, or stress reaction, of adapting to a new cultural context - and self-reported sleep outcomes among Chinese and Korean immigrants in the United States. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, acculturative stress was assessed using a 9-item scale, and sleep disturbance was measured using the 8-item scale. Sleep duration was self-reported. Poisson and linear regression analyses were conducted to examine the associations between acculturative stress, sleep disturbance, and sleep duration. Results: Our sample consists of 400 participants (females: 52%, Chinese: 50%, Koreans: 50%, the mean of age = 58.4). 81.8% of them were classified as having no sleep disturbance, whereas 18.2% were classified as having sleep disturbance. Poisson models revealed that greater acculturative stress was associated with a higher prevalence of sleep disturbance (Prevalence Ratio (PR): 1.18, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.06% to 1.31%). In linear models, a one-unit increase in acculturative stress was associated with 0.08 hr less sleep (p

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Lee, S., Ryu, S., Lee, G. E., Kawachi, I., Morey, B. N., & Slopen, N. (2022). The association of acculturative stress with self-reported sleep disturbance and sleep duration among Asian Americans. Sleep, 45(4). https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab298

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