Crime Risk and Depression Differentially Relate to Aspects of Sleep in Patients with Major Depression or Social Anxiety

Author:

Klumpp Heide1ORCID,Feurer Cope1,Chang Fini1ORCID,Kapella Mary C.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

2. Department of Biobehavioral Nursing Science, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

Abstract

Individuals with internalizing conditions such as depression or anxiety are at risk of sleep difficulties. Social–ecological models of sleep health propose factors at the individual (e.g., mental health) and neighborhood (e.g., crime risk) levels that contribute to sleep difficulties. However, these relationships have been under-researched in terms of internalizing conditions. Therefore, the current study comprised participants diagnosed with major depression (n = 24) or social anxiety (n = 35). Sleep measures included actigraphic variables (i.e., total sleep time, waking after sleep onset, sleep onset latency) and subjective sleep quality. Geocoding was used to assess nationally-normed crime risk exposure at the person level (e.g., murder, assault) and property level (e.g., robbery, burglary). Analyses consisted of independent t-tests to evaluate potential differences between diagnostic groups. To examine relationships, multiple regressions were used with internalizing symptoms, crime risk, and age as independent variables and sleep measures as the dependent variable. The t-test results revealed that groups differed in symptoms and age but not sleep or neighborhood crime. Regression results revealed crime risk positively corresponded with sleep onset latency but no other sleep measures. Also, only depression positively corresponded with total sleep time. Preliminary findings suggest exposure to crime and depression relate differentially to facets of sleep in individuals with internalizing conditions.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health

Center for Clinical and Translational Research, Chicago, IL

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

Reference67 articles.

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