Bidirectional Relations Between Daily Stress and Sleep Among Black Emerging Adults

Author:

Maher Jaclyn P1ORCID,Batts Marcus1,Rebar Amanda L2,Mead Michael P3,Zaplatosch Mitchell E1,Hevel Derek J1ORCID,Adams William M4,McGuirt Jared T5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro , Greensboro, NC , USA

2. School of Health, Medical, and Applied Sciences, Central Queensland University , Rockhampton, Queensland , Australia

3. Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University , Chicago, IL , USA

4. Division of Sports Medicine, United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee , Colorado Springs, CO , USA

5. Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Greensboro , Greensboro, NC , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Black adults experience higher levels of stress and more dysfunctional sleep patterns compared to their White peers, both of which may contribute to racial disparities in chronic health conditions. Dysfunctional sleep patterns are also more likely in emerging adults compared to other age groups. Daily stress–sleep relations in Black emerging adults are understudied. Purpose This study used ecological momentary assessment (EMA) and wrist-worn actigraphy to examine bidirectional associations between daily stress and sleep among Black emerging adults. Methods Black college freshmen (N = 50) completed an EMA protocol (i.e., five EMA prompts/day) and wore an accelerometer for 7 days. The first EMA prompt of each day assessed sleep duration and quality. All EMA prompts assessed stress. Wrist-worn actigraphy assessed nocturnal sleep duration, sleep onset latency, sleep efficiency, and waking after sleep onset. Results At the within-person level, stress experienced on a given day was not associated with any sleep metrics that night (p > .05). On evenings when actigraphy-based sleep duration was shorter (B = −0.02, p = .01) and self-reported sleep quality was poorer (B = −0.12, p = .02) than usual, stress was greater the following day. At the between-person level, negative bidirectional relations existed between stress and actigraphy-based waking after sleep onset (stress predicting sleep: B = −0.35, p = .02; sleep predicting stress: B = −0.27, p = .04). Conclusions Among Black emerging adults, associations between daily sleep and stress vary at the between- and within-person level and are dependent upon the sleep metric assessed. Future research should compare these relations across different measures of stress and different racial/ethnic groups to better understand health disparities.

Funder

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

Reference58 articles.

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