AI Article Synopsis

  • A study examined sleep health and related mental and physical health issues among naval personnel on sea duty (afloat) compared to those on shore duty (ashore), revealing significant differences in sleep metrics and health outcomes.
  • Results showed that while sleep quality was generally similar between groups, those on shore duty experienced poorer physical health, and afloat personnel reported shorter sleep durations but better physical health overall.
  • The research highlighted that naval personnel with obesity faced more sleep-related health challenges and suggested the need for further studies using objective measures to better understand sleep health in military settings.

Article Abstract

Despite emerging public concern regarding the sleep health of military personnel over the past two decades, there remains a dearth of research examining sleep health among naval personnel assigned to sea duty. This study examined sleep metrics (e.g. fatigue, short sleep duration) and mental (e.g. posttraumatic stress disorder, depression) and physical health (e.g. type 2 diabetes, bodily pain) outcomes among naval personnel with recent sea duty (i.e. afloat) compared with naval personnel with recent shore duty (i.e. ashore). Prevalence ratios and mean differences for all outcomes were estimated and adjusted for demographic and military variables, and subsequently stratified by obesity. Sleep metrics were similar between afloat and ashore sailors except for short sleep duration, while sailors with recent shore duty had poorer physical health compared with those with recent sea duty. Stratified analyses suggested naval personnel with obesity had a higher proportion of nearly all adverse sleep-related health outcomes than those without obesity. Among participants without obesity, afloat personnel were more likely to report very short sleep (≤ 5 hours) and fewer hours of average nightly sleep, but were less likely to report physical health outcomes compared with ashore personnel. These findings suggest potential differences in sleep metrics and sleep-related health outcomes between afloat and ashore naval personnel. Additional research examining sleep outcomes using more objective measures is required to further investigate these findings, which may inform strategies to foster consolidated sleep despite environmental and occupational challenges in order to maintain high-performing naval personnel.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11597007PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jsr.14207DOI Listing

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