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Title: Work schedule differences in sleep problems of nursing home caregivers. Author: Takahashi M, Iwakiri K, Sotoyama M, Higuchi S, Kiguchi M, Hirata M, Hisanaga N, Kitahara T, Taoda K, Nishiyama K. Journal: Appl Ergon; 2008 Sep; 39(5):597-604. PubMed ID: 18281013. Abstract: Nursing home caregivers (n=775; 604 women; mean age 33.6 years) were studied to examine how work schedules affect their sleep. The shift group (n=536) worked under a rotating two-shift system (n=365), a rotating three-shift system (n=66), or other types of shifts (n=78). The non-shift group included 222 caregivers. Participants completed a questionnaire about working conditions, sleep problems, health, lifestyle, and demographic factors. The two-shift caregivers reported the highest levels of difficulty initiating sleep (DIS, 37.6%), insomnia symptoms (43.0%), and poor quality of sleep (24.9%) among the groups. Adjusted odds ratios for these problems were significantly greater for the two-shift caregivers than for non-shift counterparts: DIS (odds ratio 2.86, 95% confidence interval 1.57-5.20), insomnia symptoms (2.33, 1.36-4.02), and poor sleep quality (2.15, 1.09-4.22). Our data suggest that working under a rotating two-shift system, which has a longer night shift, is associated with an elevated risk of sleep problems for nursing home caregivers.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]