Author:
Sun Jiyao,Zhang Nan,Carter Jackie,Vanhoutte Bram,Wang Jian,Chandola Tarani
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The overall level of negative affect (NeA) has been linked to impaired health. However, whether the diurnal timing of NeA matters and whether the NeA-health relationship is mediated by sleep quality remain unclear.
Methods
Using a longitudinal dataset (2006, 2009 and 2014 waves) consisting of 1959 participants, we examined the within-person impact of both bedtime NeA and non-bedtime NeA measured by Day Reconstruction Method (DRM) on subjective health measured by Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), and the mediating effect of sleep quality on the NeA-health relationships by fixed effect models.
Results
Bedtime NeA predicted poorer health, while non-bedtime NeA was unrelated to health. The deleterious impact of bedtime NeA reduced and became non-significant after sleep quality was controlled for. Bedtime NeA also significantly predicted impaired sleep quality.
Conclusions
Bedtime NeA is a stronger predictor of poorer health than non-bedtime NeA, and the deleterious influence of bedtime NeA on health seems to operate through poor sleep quality. Therefore, interventions to reduce bedtime NeA could potentially improve subsequent sleep quality, thereby protecting people to some extent from impaired health status.
Funder
PhD Studentship
seedcorn grant from Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing
GCRF grant from Research England and British Academy/Leverhulme
National Science Foundation of USA
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Economic and Social Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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