4.6 Article

Effect of Seasonal Ambient Temperature on Sleep and Thermal Comfort in Older People Living in Public Elderly Facilities

Journal

BUILDINGS
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/buildings11120574

Keywords

sleep; elderly care facility; thermal environment; season; sex difference; adaptive behavior

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This study examined the thermal environment, sleep quality, and gender differences among elderly occupants in elder care facilities. Findings showed that adaptive approaches are not sufficient to improve sleep efficiency for elderly men within acceptable temperature ranges. Sleep parameters were significantly better for elderly women.
This study aimed to investigate the thermal environment and thermal comfort of elderly occupants living in elder care facilities and to compare the quality of sleep, in all four seasons, of these elderly occupants. A total of 16 healthy participants with a mean age of 80 +/- 5 years (range, 70-87 years) were recruited in two elderly facilities, of which, 13 participated in all four measurements. The sleep parameter was measured by a wrist actigraph which the participants were requested to wear and analyzed with commercial software using the Cole-Kripke algorithm, to assign scores for sleeping and waking patterns. Both ambient temperature (Ta) and relative humidity (Rh) levels were found to be lower in the winter and higher in the summer. The Ta in the summer and Rh in the winter were not within the scope of the Japanese Standard for Maintenance of Sanitation in Buildings, as the central HVAC and air conditioners were turned off due to the absence of facility managers. More than 50% of the elderly occupants used fans and increased airflow by opening windows during the summer nights as an adaptive thermal approach. The slope of the relationship between prevailing mean outdoor temperature and indoor Ta determined in this study was similar to the adaptive model and the regression line lies over the upper limits of the adaptive model. No significant difference was found in the sleep parameter among the four seasons; however, a sex difference was found in the sleep latency and length of waking period during the sleep. The sleep parameters such as sleep efficiency indexes were significantly better for elderly women than men. The adaptive approach is not enough to improve the sleep efficiency of sleeping elderly people even within the acceptable temperature range based on the thermal comfort, especially for elderly men.

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