Sleep, mental health, and access to health care of women truck drivers.

J Am Assoc Nurse Pract

Department of Nursing Systems, Hugh F. and Jeannette G. McKean Endowed Chair, College of NursingAcademic Health Sciences Center University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida.

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the health issues of women truck drivers, highlighting that they often face chronic stress, poor sleep quality, and underutilization of mental health services.
  • Despite having health insurance, many women do not seek care due to job-related conflicts, with a significant percentage showing symptoms of PTSD.
  • Recommendations include improving access to care through telehealth and focusing future research on younger women truck drivers to assess additional health influences like menopause.

Article Abstract

Background: The numbers of women in trucking are growing steadily, yet because they represent a minority group, little is known about their health issues. Most studies of truck drivers have focused on the mental and physical health, sleep, and health care access of male truck drivers.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to characterize chronic stress, sleep, and mental health service and overall access to care among women truck drivers.

Methodology: Twenty-five female truck drivers were a subsample of participants from a larger parent study of truck drivers. After approval from the institutional review board, participants completed a 59-item Qualtrics survey; data were transferred from Qualtrics to SPSS v. 24 for analysis.

Results: No acute sleepiness or excess daytime sleepiness was observed, but participants only slept 6 hr per night, and all experienced poor sleep quality. Although 28% of participants met or exceeded the threshold score for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), only 8% sought care for feelings of upset or distress. Also, 80% of the women had health insurance, yet there were those who did not seek care because of job-related conflicts.

Conclusion/implications: Participants were sleep deprived and experienced poor-quality sleep. Mental health and other health services utilization was low. Implications for practice include consideration of telehealth services to improve health care access and screening and referral as needed to mental health care providers by Department of Transportation medical examiners. Future research should include younger women truck drivers to determine the potential contribution of perimenopause/menopause to some of the health issues experienced by this group of workers.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/JXX.0000000000000970DOI Listing

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