Medical and Law Graduates and their sleep disorders: Daytime oversleep and Risk Factors
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12662/2317-3076jhbs.v6i4.2062.p364-370.2018Palabras clave:
Sleep. Students. Sleep Disorders. Excessive Drowsiness.Resumen
Backgroud: The exogenous factors such as family dynamics, psychosocial stress, academic hours and lifestyle can alter the quality of sleep and affect the people’s physical, occupational, cognitive and social functioning. Objectives: evaluate the epidemiological profile, excessive daytime sleepiness, risk factors and the quality of sleep among university students. Method: Cross-sectional study with 701 Medical and Law students from a private Brazilian Northeastern College. The Sociodemographic profile, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and Epworth Sleepiness Scale questionnaires have been applied. The data were submitted to simple and percentage frequency as well as bivariate and multivariate analysis. Significance level: 5%. Results: The sample was with 659 students, 243(37%) of Medicine and 416(63%) of Law. Age group 18-24 years, predominance of females, age group 18-24 years, female 393 (60%); they self-declared being white 282 (42.7%) and brown 303 (45.9%), said they were single 604(92%) and alcohol consumers more than 60%. Poor sleep quality and sleep disturbance were found in 169(70%) medical students and 221(54%) in law ones, being statistically significant (p <0.001) for the medical students. In this comparison, The Law students presented a higher risk (RR 1.34 (1.15-1.56), p <0.001) for disturbance and poor sleep quality. The risk of excessive daytime sleepiness versus drug use represented 71% (RR 1.71, 95% CI 1.18-2.49) for law students. General concerns, studies, anxiety and insomnia were the most frequent risk factors. Conclusion: Risk factors which are part of Medical and Law students’ daily routine affect their sleep quality and increase the risks of excessive daytime sleepiness.Descargas
Los datos de descargas todavía no están disponibles.
Descargas
Publicado
2018-10-09
Cómo citar
1.
de Souza Neta AM, Fink Santos Neves JPD, Barreto Íkaro D de C, Freitas Trindade LMD. Medical and Law Graduates and their sleep disorders: Daytime oversleep and Risk Factors. J Health Biol Sci. [Internet]. 9 de octubre de 2018 [citado 5 de noviembre de 2024];6(4):364-70. Disponible en: https://periodicos.unichristus.edu.br/jhbs/article/view/2062
Número
Sección
ARTÍCULOS ORIGINALES
Licencia
Autores que publican en esta revista acepta los siguientes términos:
- Autores retienen el copyright y otorguen el diario el derecho de la primera publicación, con el trabajo simultáneamente licenciado bajo la licencia Creative Commons que permite compartir el trabajo con reconocimiento de autoría y publicación inicial en este diario.
- Permite que los autores asumir contratos adicionales por separado, para su distribución no exclusiva de la obra publicada en esta versión de diario (ej.: publicar en Repositorio institucional o como un capítulo del libro), con el reconocimiento de autoría y publicación inicial en este diario.
- Autores se permite y se anima a publicar y distribuir su trabajo en línea (por ejemplo, en repositorios institucionales o en tu página personal) en cualquier momento antes o durante el proceso editorial, ya que esto puede generar cambios productivos, así como aumentar el impacto y la citación de trabajos publicados (ver el efecto del acceso abierto).