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Family Caregivers

How does beginning or ceasing of informal caregiving of individuals in poor health influence sleep quality? Findings from a nationally representative longitudinal study

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Pages 314-319 | Received 26 Aug 2020, Accepted 26 Nov 2020, Published online: 11 Dec 2020
 

Abstract

Background

Various cross-sectional studies exist examining the association between informal caregiving and sleep quality. However, there is a lack of longitudinal studies investigating whether beginning and ceasing of informal caregiving is associated with changes in sleep quality.

Aims

Investigating whether beginning and ceasing of informal caregiving of individuals in poor health is associated with changes in sleep quality in both sexes.

Methods

Data were taken from a nationally representative sample of individuals ≥ 40 years in Germany from 2008 to 2017. In our analytical sample, n equaled 22,910 observations. Based on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, the sleep quality was assessed by the difficulties falling asleep during the last month, difficulties with sleep because of waking up during the last month (in both cases: (from 1 = not during the last month to 4 = three or more times a week) and the overall assessment of sleep quality during the last month (from 1 = very good to 4 = very bad).

Results

Asymmetric fixed effects regressions showed that in men beginning to provide informal care was associated with decreased overall sleep quality (β=-.09 (95% CI: −.15 – −.03), p<.01) and an increased likelihood of difficulties because of waking up (OR: 1.54 (95% CI: 1.07–2.20), p<.05), whereas ceasing to provide informal care was not associated with the outcome measures (both, in women and in men).

Discussion

Starting informal caregiving had deleterious effects on sleep quality in men.

Conclusions

Efforts to assist men in maintaining sleep quality may be beneficial.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Ethics approval

An ethical statement for the DEAS study was not required, as the criteria for it were not fulfilled (e.g. risk for the respondents, examination of patients or the use of invasive methods).

Funding

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Data availability statement

The anonymized datasets of the DEAS study were retrieved from the Research Data Centre of the German Centre of Gerontology (https://www.dza.de/en/fdz/german-ageing-survey/access-to-deas-data.html), which is available to scientists at universities and research institutes for secondary analyses.

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