Here we provide some practical advice on how to perform sleep studies after the COVID-19 outbreak based on our experience, the review of the existing literature and current national and international recommendations by Health Authorities. We believe that with appropriate precautions it is possible to...
BOSTON - A new study finds that having even a mild case of COVID-19 could cause you to lose sleep. Insomnia has been associated with COVID among hospitalized patients, but a team of researchers in Vietnam wanted to know whether it also affected people with mild illness. They looked ...
Rumination could be a mechanism by which COVID-19 stressors are linked with poor sleep quality. Cognitive reappraisal might provide desired benefits to improving sleep quality while expressive suppression may do the opposite. Implications for future steps and health interventions are discussed.关键词: ...
including race, hospitalization for COVID-19, greater anxiety severity and fatigue. After adjusting for demographics, Black patients were three times more likely to develop these sleep disturbances. The findings were published inJournal of General Internal Medicine. ...
41% of patients report moderate-to-severe issues, with Black individuals 3 times more likely to develop these difficulties. Approximately 41% of individuals with long COVID had moderate-to-severe sleep disturbances, according to the results of a study published in Journal of General Internal ...
The sleep duration was not associated with mental health disorders in the adjusted analyses. Conclusion The results provide important evidence that sleep quality can influence mental health of adults. The COVID-19 pandemic seems to have had a considerable impact on this association....
"These same systems are also affected by sleep disturbance, another symptom that has been frequently reported after COVID-19." "Our findings suggest that sleep disturbance is a common problem after hospitalization for COVID-19 and is associated with breathlessness." ...
Thus, we summarized the current evidence on the prevalence and associated factors of sleep distur bance in patients with COVID-19, HWs, and the general public. The increasing evidence addresses the necessity of awareness and interventions of sleep disturbance during and after COVID-19 pandemic...
“These same systems are also affected by sleep disturbance, another symptom that has been frequently reported after COVID-19. Our findings suggest that sleep disturbance is a common problem after hospitalization for COVID-19 and is associated with breathlessness. ...
A new study in the journal Sleep finds that increased evening screen time during the COVID-19 lockdown negatively affects sleep quality.