A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations

Insufficient sleep and insomnia promote chronic disease in the general population and may combine with social and economic factors to increase rates of chronic health conditions among AI/AN people. Given that insufficient sleep and insomnia can be addressed via behavioral interventions, it is critic...

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Main Authors: Anayansi Lombardero, Ciara D. Hansen, Andrew E. Richie, Duncan G. Campbell, Aaron W. Joyce
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Environmental and Public Health
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/4306463
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spelling doaj-ec4435bdb8c84748b21c23643cb3ceed2020-11-24T20:40:34ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Environmental and Public Health1687-98051687-98132019-01-01201910.1155/2019/43064634306463A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native PopulationsAnayansi Lombardero0Ciara D. Hansen1Andrew E. Richie2Duncan G. Campbell3Aaron W. Joyce4University of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, AK, USAWaianae Coast Comprehensive Health Center, Waianae, HI, USAUniversity of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, AK, USAUniversity of Montana, Missoula, MT, USANew Mexico VA Health Care System, Albuquerque, NM, USAInsufficient sleep and insomnia promote chronic disease in the general population and may combine with social and economic factors to increase rates of chronic health conditions among AI/AN people. Given that insufficient sleep and insomnia can be addressed via behavioral interventions, it is critical to understand the prevalence and correlates of these disorders among AI/AN individuals in order to elucidate the mechanisms associated with health disparities and provide guidance for subsequent treatment research and practice. We reviewed the available literature on insufficient sleep and insomnia in the AI/AN population. PubMed, PsycINFO, Google Scholar, and ProQuest were searched between June 12th and October 28th of 2018. Prevalence of insufficient sleep ranged from 15% to 40%; insomnia prevalence ranged from 25% to 33%. Insufficient sleep was associated with unhealthy diet, low physical activity levels, higher BMI, worse self-reported health, increased risk for diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, frequent mental distress, smoking, binge drinking, depression, and chronic pain. Insomnia was associated with depression, childhood abuse, PTSD, anxiety, alcohol use, low social support, and low trait-resilience levels. Research on evidence-based treatment and implementation practices targeting insufficient sleep and insomnia was lacking, and only one study described the development/validation of a measure of insufficient sleep among AI/AN people. There is a need for rigorous sleep research including testing and implementation of evidence-based treatment for insufficient sleep and insomnia in this population in an effort to help eliminate health disparities. We present recommendations for research and clinical practice based on the current review.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/4306463
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anayansi Lombardero
Ciara D. Hansen
Andrew E. Richie
Duncan G. Campbell
Aaron W. Joyce
spellingShingle Anayansi Lombardero
Ciara D. Hansen
Andrew E. Richie
Duncan G. Campbell
Aaron W. Joyce
A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
Journal of Environmental and Public Health
author_facet Anayansi Lombardero
Ciara D. Hansen
Andrew E. Richie
Duncan G. Campbell
Aaron W. Joyce
author_sort Anayansi Lombardero
title A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
title_short A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
title_full A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
title_fullStr A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
title_full_unstemmed A Narrative Review of the Literature on Insufficient Sleep, Insomnia, and Health Correlates in American Indian/Alaska Native Populations
title_sort narrative review of the literature on insufficient sleep, insomnia, and health correlates in american indian/alaska native populations
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Environmental and Public Health
issn 1687-9805
1687-9813
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Insufficient sleep and insomnia promote chronic disease in the general population and may combine with social and economic factors to increase rates of chronic health conditions among AI/AN people. Given that insufficient sleep and insomnia can be addressed via behavioral interventions, it is critical to understand the prevalence and correlates of these disorders among AI/AN individuals in order to elucidate the mechanisms associated with health disparities and provide guidance for subsequent treatment research and practice. We reviewed the available literature on insufficient sleep and insomnia in the AI/AN population. PubMed, PsycINFO, Google Scholar, and ProQuest were searched between June 12th and October 28th of 2018. Prevalence of insufficient sleep ranged from 15% to 40%; insomnia prevalence ranged from 25% to 33%. Insufficient sleep was associated with unhealthy diet, low physical activity levels, higher BMI, worse self-reported health, increased risk for diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, frequent mental distress, smoking, binge drinking, depression, and chronic pain. Insomnia was associated with depression, childhood abuse, PTSD, anxiety, alcohol use, low social support, and low trait-resilience levels. Research on evidence-based treatment and implementation practices targeting insufficient sleep and insomnia was lacking, and only one study described the development/validation of a measure of insufficient sleep among AI/AN people. There is a need for rigorous sleep research including testing and implementation of evidence-based treatment for insufficient sleep and insomnia in this population in an effort to help eliminate health disparities. We present recommendations for research and clinical practice based on the current review.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/4306463
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