Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students

College students are one of the top at-risk groups for chronic sleep loss and poor sleep quality, which can yield deleterious effects on health. The college population is also notorious for poor sleep hygiene, or modifiable behaviors that promote sufficient sleep quantity and quality. Research sugge...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hannah Peach, Jane F. Gaultney, David D. Gray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1168768
id doaj-21d30bb91d2f49478a2261b0849bf97f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-21d30bb91d2f49478a2261b0849bf97f2021-03-18T16:21:44ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Psychology2331-19082016-12-013110.1080/23311908.2016.11687681168768Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college studentsHannah Peach0Jane F. Gaultney1David D. Gray2University of North Carolina at CharlotteUniversity of North Carolina at CharlotteFielding Graduate UniversityCollege students are one of the top at-risk groups for chronic sleep loss and poor sleep quality, which can yield deleterious effects on health. The college population is also notorious for poor sleep hygiene, or modifiable behaviors that promote sufficient sleep quantity and quality. Research suggests sleep can impact both positive and negative aspects of college mental health, but few studies have examined the effects of sleep on both subjective well-being and depression within one model. Further, little research has tested sleep hygiene as a modifiable risk factor for positive and mental aspects of health. The present study tested structural equation models in which sleep quality either partially or fully mediated the effects of sleep hygiene behaviors on depression and poor subjective well-being. A partial mediation model (CFI = .98, TLI = .94, RMSEA = .08) suggested a very good-fitting model, and sleep hygiene yielded significant direct and indirect effects on both depression and subjective well-being. Findings suggest intervention efforts targeting the improvement of sleep hygiene and sleep quality among college students may yield effects on student well-being, which can improve mental health among this at-risk population.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1168768depressionwell-beingsleep healthsleep behaviorsemerging adults
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hannah Peach
Jane F. Gaultney
David D. Gray
spellingShingle Hannah Peach
Jane F. Gaultney
David D. Gray
Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
Cogent Psychology
depression
well-being
sleep health
sleep behaviors
emerging adults
author_facet Hannah Peach
Jane F. Gaultney
David D. Gray
author_sort Hannah Peach
title Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
title_short Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
title_full Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
title_fullStr Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
title_full_unstemmed Sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
title_sort sleep hygiene and sleep quality as predictors of positive and negative dimensions of mental health in college students
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Psychology
issn 2331-1908
publishDate 2016-12-01
description College students are one of the top at-risk groups for chronic sleep loss and poor sleep quality, which can yield deleterious effects on health. The college population is also notorious for poor sleep hygiene, or modifiable behaviors that promote sufficient sleep quantity and quality. Research suggests sleep can impact both positive and negative aspects of college mental health, but few studies have examined the effects of sleep on both subjective well-being and depression within one model. Further, little research has tested sleep hygiene as a modifiable risk factor for positive and mental aspects of health. The present study tested structural equation models in which sleep quality either partially or fully mediated the effects of sleep hygiene behaviors on depression and poor subjective well-being. A partial mediation model (CFI = .98, TLI = .94, RMSEA = .08) suggested a very good-fitting model, and sleep hygiene yielded significant direct and indirect effects on both depression and subjective well-being. Findings suggest intervention efforts targeting the improvement of sleep hygiene and sleep quality among college students may yield effects on student well-being, which can improve mental health among this at-risk population.
topic depression
well-being
sleep health
sleep behaviors
emerging adults
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1168768
work_keys_str_mv AT hannahpeach sleephygieneandsleepqualityaspredictorsofpositiveandnegativedimensionsofmentalhealthincollegestudents
AT janefgaultney sleephygieneandsleepqualityaspredictorsofpositiveandnegativedimensionsofmentalhealthincollegestudents
AT daviddgray sleephygieneandsleepqualityaspredictorsofpositiveandnegativedimensionsofmentalhealthincollegestudents
_version_ 1724215334864420864