4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Subjective sleep quality and sleep problems in the general Japanese adult population

Journal

PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCES
Volume 55, Issue 3, Pages 213-215

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1440-1819.2001.00830.x

Keywords

epidemiology; Japanese adult population; Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI); sleep problems; subjective sleep quality

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To dimensionally describe subjective sleep quality using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and estimate the prevalence rate of sleep problems (PSQI global score >5) in the general Japanese adult population, 1871 subjects randomly selected from the 1995 Census were examined. The PSQI component scores (mean+/-SD) widely ranged (e.g. 0.04+/-0.31 in hypnotic medication use for males aged 20-29 years, 0.03+/-0.18 in hypnotic medication use for females aged 20-29 years, 1.10+/-0.94 in sleep latency for males aged 80 or older. 1.52+/-1.03 in sleep latency for females aged 80 or older). Statistical significance was found in each component score among age groups by gender. The PSQI global scores (mean+/-SD) by age groups ranged from 4.00 +/- 2.59 to 5.02 +/- 3.89 for males (P < 0.39) and 4.30 +/- 2.34 to 6.75 +/- 4.10 for females (P < 0.001). The respective prevalence rates of sleep problems were 26.4% (95% CI = 23.6, 29.3) for males and 31.1% (95% CI=28.1, 33.9) for females.

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