Insomnia in Shift Workers: Which Trait and State Characteristics Could Serve as Foundation for Developing an Innovative Therapeutic Approach?

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Shift workers face a heightened risk of insomnia. Recent research has yielded promising insights; but further progress is necessary to better treat insomnia in this group. The present pilot study evaluates how different personality traits and states impact sleep in shift workers to develop an innovative therapeutic approach. An online survey was administered to an ad-hoc sample of N = 225 (112 shift workers), and correlations were calculated between sleep variables and specific characteristics (e.g., psychological impairment, personality traits, sleep-related behavior, attitudes towards sleep and shift work). Group differences between good/poor sleepers and day/shift work were determined using Mann-Whitney U-tests and Kruskal-Wallis H-tests. Regression was used to identify appropriate predictors. All factors (except perfectionism, chronotype, and importance of sleep) yielded significant results in both correlations and group differences (good/poor sleepers). The groups day/shift workers showed only minor differences. Dysfunctional beliefs about sleep, pre-sleep arousal, and depression were identified as predictors of poorer sleep. We conclude that interventions on the factors mentioned can replace those on regularity and will build an innovative therapy for shift workers on this basis. Once the treatment manual is finalized, its efficacy will be assessed through a randomized controlled trial.

Article activity feed