Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire

David C Mallinson, Maria E Kamenetsky, Erika W Hagen, Paul E Peppard Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USACorrespondence: Paul E PeppardDepartment of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public...

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Main Authors: Mallinson DC, Kamenetsky ME, Hagen EW, Peppard PE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2019-09-01
Series:Nature and Science of Sleep
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/subjective-sleep-measurement-comparing-sleep-diary-to-questionnaire-peer-reviewed-article-NSS
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spelling doaj-6430d62c312c41da81ad6871d88311be2020-11-25T00:44:12ZengDove Medical PressNature and Science of Sleep1179-16082019-09-01Volume 1119720648517Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaireMallinson DCKamenetsky MEHagen EWPeppard PEDavid C Mallinson, Maria E Kamenetsky, Erika W Hagen, Paul E Peppard Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USACorrespondence: Paul E PeppardDepartment of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, WARF Building #611A, 610 N. Walnut St, Madison, WI 53726-2397, USATel +1 608 262 2680Email ppeppard@wisc.eduPurpose: The sleep diary is the gold standard of self-reported sleep duration, but its comparability to sleep questionnaires is uncertain. The purpose of this study was to compare self-reported sleep duration between a sleep diary and a sleep questionnaire and to test whether sleep-related disorders were associated with diary-questionnaire differences in sleep duration.Participants and methods: We compared self-reported sleep duration from 5,432 questionnaire-sleep diary pairs in a longitudinal cohort of 1,516 adults. Participants reported sleep information in seven-day sleep diaries and in questionnaires. Research staff abstracted average sleep durations for three time periods (overall; weekday; weekend) from diaries and questionnaires. For each time period, we evaluated diary-questionnaire differences in sleep duration with Welch’s two-sample t-tests. Using linear mixed effects regression, we regressed overall diary-questionnaire sleep duration difference on several participant characteristics: reporting any insomnia symptoms, having sleep apnea, sex, body mass index, smoking status, Short Form-12 Physical Health Composite Score, and Short Form-12 Mental Health Composite Score.Results: The average diary-reported overall sleep duration (7.76 hrs) was longer than that of the questionnaire (7.07 hrs) by approximately 41 mins (0.69 hrs, 95% confidence interval: 0.62, 0.76 hrs). Results were consistent across weekday- and weekend-specific differences. Demographic-adjusted linear mixed effects models tested whether insomnia symptoms or sleep apnea were associated with diary-questionnaire differences in sleep duration. Insomnia symptoms were associated with a 17 min longer duration on the diary relative to the questionnaire (β=0.28 hrs, 95% confidence interval: 0.22, 0.33 hrs), but sleep apnea was not significantly associated with diary-questionnaire difference. Female sex was associated with greater diary-questionnaire duration differences, whereas better self-reported health was associated with lesser differences.Conclusion: Diaries and questionnaires are somewhat disparate methods of assessing subjective sleep duration, although diaries report longer duration relative to questionnaires, and insomnia symptoms may contribute to greater perceived differences.Keywords: comparison, self-reported sleep, sleep log, surveyshttps://www.dovepress.com/subjective-sleep-measurement-comparing-sleep-diary-to-questionnaire-peer-reviewed-article-NSSComparisonself-reported sleepsleep logsurveys
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mallinson DC
Kamenetsky ME
Hagen EW
Peppard PE
spellingShingle Mallinson DC
Kamenetsky ME
Hagen EW
Peppard PE
Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
Nature and Science of Sleep
Comparison
self-reported sleep
sleep log
surveys
author_facet Mallinson DC
Kamenetsky ME
Hagen EW
Peppard PE
author_sort Mallinson DC
title Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
title_short Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
title_full Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
title_fullStr Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
title_full_unstemmed Subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
title_sort subjective sleep measurement: comparing sleep diary to questionnaire
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Nature and Science of Sleep
issn 1179-1608
publishDate 2019-09-01
description David C Mallinson, Maria E Kamenetsky, Erika W Hagen, Paul E Peppard Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USACorrespondence: Paul E PeppardDepartment of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, WARF Building #611A, 610 N. Walnut St, Madison, WI 53726-2397, USATel +1 608 262 2680Email ppeppard@wisc.eduPurpose: The sleep diary is the gold standard of self-reported sleep duration, but its comparability to sleep questionnaires is uncertain. The purpose of this study was to compare self-reported sleep duration between a sleep diary and a sleep questionnaire and to test whether sleep-related disorders were associated with diary-questionnaire differences in sleep duration.Participants and methods: We compared self-reported sleep duration from 5,432 questionnaire-sleep diary pairs in a longitudinal cohort of 1,516 adults. Participants reported sleep information in seven-day sleep diaries and in questionnaires. Research staff abstracted average sleep durations for three time periods (overall; weekday; weekend) from diaries and questionnaires. For each time period, we evaluated diary-questionnaire differences in sleep duration with Welch’s two-sample t-tests. Using linear mixed effects regression, we regressed overall diary-questionnaire sleep duration difference on several participant characteristics: reporting any insomnia symptoms, having sleep apnea, sex, body mass index, smoking status, Short Form-12 Physical Health Composite Score, and Short Form-12 Mental Health Composite Score.Results: The average diary-reported overall sleep duration (7.76 hrs) was longer than that of the questionnaire (7.07 hrs) by approximately 41 mins (0.69 hrs, 95% confidence interval: 0.62, 0.76 hrs). Results were consistent across weekday- and weekend-specific differences. Demographic-adjusted linear mixed effects models tested whether insomnia symptoms or sleep apnea were associated with diary-questionnaire differences in sleep duration. Insomnia symptoms were associated with a 17 min longer duration on the diary relative to the questionnaire (β=0.28 hrs, 95% confidence interval: 0.22, 0.33 hrs), but sleep apnea was not significantly associated with diary-questionnaire difference. Female sex was associated with greater diary-questionnaire duration differences, whereas better self-reported health was associated with lesser differences.Conclusion: Diaries and questionnaires are somewhat disparate methods of assessing subjective sleep duration, although diaries report longer duration relative to questionnaires, and insomnia symptoms may contribute to greater perceived differences.Keywords: comparison, self-reported sleep, sleep log, surveys
topic Comparison
self-reported sleep
sleep log
surveys
url https://www.dovepress.com/subjective-sleep-measurement-comparing-sleep-diary-to-questionnaire-peer-reviewed-article-NSS
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