Sleep and high-risk behavior in military service members: a mega-analysis of four diverse U.S. Army units

Author:

Mantua Janna1ORCID,Bessey Alexxa F2,Mickelson Carolyn A1,Choynowski Jake J1,Noble Jeremy J3,Burke Tina M1,McKeon Ashlee B1,Sowden Walter J14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Behavioral Biology Branch, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD

2. Department of Psychology, Clemson University, Clemson, SC

3. 75th Ranger Regiment Headquarters, Ft. Benning, GA

4. Tripler Army Medical Center, Honolulu, HI

Abstract

Abstract Experimental sleep restriction and deprivation lead to risky decision-making. Further, in naturalistic settings, short sleep duration and poor sleep quality have been linked to real-world high-risk behaviors (HRB), such as reckless driving or substance use. Military populations, in general, tend to sleep less and have poorer sleep quality than nonmilitary populations due to a number of occupational, cultural, and psychosocial factors (e.g. continuous operations, stress, and trauma). Consequently, it is possible that insufficient sleep in this population is linked to HRB. To investigate this question, we combined data from four diverse United States Army samples and conducted a mega-analysis by aggregating raw, individual-level data (n = 2,296, age 24.7 ± 5.3). A negative binomial regression and a logistic regression were used to determine whether subjective sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index [PSQI], Insomnia Severity Index [ISI], and duration [h]) predicted instances of military-specific HRB and the commission of any HRB (yes/no), respectively. Poor sleep quality slightly elevated the risk for committing HRBs (PSQI Exp(B): 1.12 and ISI Exp(B): 1.07), and longer duration reduced the risk for HRBs to a greater extent (Exp(B): 0.78), even when controlling for a number of relevant demographic factors. Longer sleep duration also predicted a decreased risk for commission of any HRB behaviors (Exp(B): 0.71). These findings demonstrate that sleep quality and duration (the latter factor, in particular) could be targets for reducing excessive HRB in military populations. These findings could therefore lead to unit-wide or military-wide policy changes regarding sleep and HRB.

Funder

Department of Defense Military Operational Medicine Research Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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