AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the social environment influences sleep patterns among the BaYaka foragers in the Republic of the Congo, focusing on household dynamics such as crowding, cosleeping, and marital conflict.
  • Data collected from 49 individuals over 318 nights revealed that more crowded sleeping spaces led to shorter and poorer quality sleep for BaYaka adults, contrasting with other cultures.
  • The research highlights the importance of local socio-ecological factors affecting sleep, suggesting the need for further exploration of sleep and health in diverse settings beyond Euro-American contexts.

Article Abstract

Given the contributions of sleep to a range of health outcomes, there is substantial interest in ecological and environmental factors, including psychosocial contexts, that shape variation in sleep between individuals and populations. However, the links between social dynamics and sleep are not well-characterized beyond Euro-American settings, representing a gap in knowledge regarding the way that local socio-ecological conditions interrelate with sleep profiles across diverse settings. Here, we focused on data from a subsistence-level society in Republic of the Congo to test for links between the household/family social environment and sleep measures. Specifically, we used actigraphy-derived sleep data (N = 49; 318 nights) from two community locations (a village and rainforest camp) among BaYaka foragers, who are members of a remote, non-industrialized subsistence society in the Congo Basin. We drew on social dynamics that have been previously linked to sleep variation in Euro-American contexts, including: household crowding, same surface cosleeping, and marital conflict. We examined the following sleep measures: total sleep time (TST), total 24-h sleep time (TTST), and sleep quality (fragmentation). BaYaka adults had shorter and lower quality sleep when their shared sleeping space was more crowded. In the village, parents with breastfeeding-aged infants had longer TTST and higher quality sleep than adults without infants, contrasting with results from other cultural contexts. Based on peer rankings of marital conflict, husbands showed longer and higher quality sleep in less conflicted marriages. Women showed the opposite pattern. These counter-intuitive findings for women may reflect the limitations of the measurement for wives' marital experiences. In total, these results point to the importance of considering local socio-ecological conditions to sleep profiles and underscore the need for expanded study of sleep and health outcomes in settings where shared sleep in constrained space is routine practice.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115345DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sleep
18
social dynamics
12
sleep profiles
12
quality sleep
12
dynamics sleep
8
bayaka foragers
8
congo basin
8
health outcomes
8
local socio-ecological
8
socio-ecological conditions
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!