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Journal Article

Citation

Humphreys J, Lee K. Issues Ment. Health Nurs. 2005; 26(7): 771-780.

Affiliation

Department of Family Health Care Nursing, University of California-San Francisco, CA 94143, USA. janice.humphreys@nursing.ucsf.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/01612840591008401

PMID

16126651

Abstract

This study describes objective and subjective sleep in a convenience sample of 29 battered women living in specialized transitional housing programs compared to 30 women living in their own stable home environment. Compared to healthy controls, battered women living in transitional housing experienced longer sleep onset latencies by both subjective and objective measures and higher percentage of time awake during the night by objective measure. Poor sleep quality may reflect the relative contributions of less total sleep time, difficulty falling asleep, and more awakenings during the night rather than just one aspect of disturbed sleep. Findings suggest that battered women in transitional housing programs may improve daytime alertness and benefit from interventions directed toward reducing sleep onset latency as well as increasing total sleep time.


Language: en

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