Study Objectives: In the context of the current COVID-19 pandemic situation, we address the following important questions: (1) How can patients be identified for possible OSA while sleep clinic testing is temporarily unavailable or limited? and (2) What measures can be suggested to improve sleep health until proper diagnosis and treatment become safe and available again? Methods: As a proxy for home or in-laboratory testing, validation of a symptom-based measure ofOSA risk is presented, based on an ongoing larger prospective study of 156 family medicine patients with OSA (88 women, 68 men; mean age, 57 years) and 60 control participants (36 women, 24 men; mean age, 54 years) recruited from the community. Participants completed the Sleep Symptom Checklist (SSC) and a range of other self-report measures; primary care patients also underwent a polysomnographic sleep study. Results: Results showed that (1) individuals with OSA reported more symptoms on the SSC related to insomnia, daytime symptoms, sleep disorders, and psychological maladjustment than did the control group (all P
CITATION STYLE
Rizzo, D., Libman, E., Baltzan, M., Fichten, C., & Bailes, S. (2021). Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on obstructive sleep apnea: Recommendations for symptom management. Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, 17(3), 429–434. https://doi.org/10.5664/jcsm.8922
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