Sleep quality during and after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (COVID‐19) lockdowns in the UK: Results from the SleepQuest study

Author:

Blackman Jonathan12,Gabb Victoria Grace123ORCID,Carrigan Neil1,Wearn Alfie1,Meky Saba24,Selwood James12,Desai Bhavisha1,Piggins Hugh D.5,Turner Nicholas6,Greenwood Rosemary7,Coulthard Elizabeth12

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Clinical Neurosciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

2. Bristol Brain Centre Southmead Hospital, North Bristol NHS Trust Bristol UK

3. NIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre University of Bristol Bristol UK

4. Department of Psychology University of Bath Bath UK

5. School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience University of Bristol Bristol UK

6. Population Health Sciences Institute Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol Bristol UK

7. NIHR Research & Design Service South West University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, Education & Research Centre Bristol UK

Abstract

SummarySleep is fundamental to health. The aim of this study was to analyse and determine factors predicting sleep quality during and after national lockdowns due to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (COVID‐19) in the UK. A longitudinal online survey‐based study (SleepQuest) involving UK adults was administered in Spring 2020, Winter 2020, and Winter 2022 including questionnaires probing sleep quality, depression, anxiety, beliefs about sleep, demographics, COVID‐19 status, and exercise. The primary outcome was sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index). A linear mixed‐effects model evaluated factors associated with baseline and longitudinal sleep quality. Complete data were provided by 3306 participants in Spring 2020, 2196 participants in Winter 2020, and 1193 in Winter 2022. Participants were mostly female (73.8%), white (97.4%), and aged over 50 years (81.0%). On average, participants reported poor sleep quality in Spring 2020 (mean [SD] Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score = 6.59 [3.6]) and Winter 2020 (mean [SD] Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score = 6.44 [3.6]), with improved but still poor sleep quality in Winter 2022 (mean [SD] Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index score = 6.17 [3.5]). Improved sleep quality was driven by better subjective sleep and reduced daytime dysfunction and sleep latency. Being female, older, having caring responsibilities, working nightshifts, and reporting higher levels of depression, anxiety, and unhelpful beliefs about sleep were associated with worse baseline PSQI scores. Better sleep quality was associated with more days exercising per week at baseline. Interventions focusing on improving mental health, exercise, and attitudes towards sleep, particularly in at‐risk groups, may improve sleep‐related outcomes in future pandemics.

Funder

Alzheimer’s Research UK

NIHR Bristol Biomedical Research Centre

Publisher

Wiley

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