Avi Sadeh, Giora Keinan, and Keren Daon Tel Aviv University.The aim of this prospective quasi-experimental study was to assess the role of coping style as a factor moderating the relationship between stress and sleep. Sleep of 36 students was assessed by means of actigraphy and daily logs during low-stress and high-stress periods. The high-stress period was the week that the students were evaluated for acceptance to graduate programs in clinical psychology. The low-stress period was a regular academic week.
The students’ ways of coping were assessed during the baseline low-stress period using the COPE inventory. Data analysis revealed that a high emotion-focused coping score was significantly predictive of reduction in sleep time from the low- to the high-stress period. These results suggest that coping style is a key factor in assessing the relationship between stress and sleep.
Key words: sleep, stress, actigraphy, coping
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Write My Essay For MeResearch on the effects of stress on sleep has yielded confusing and inconsistent results. Many studies have associated stress with sleep difficulties in infants, children, and adults (Cartwright & Wood, 1991; Healey et al., 1981; Lavie, 2001; Lundh & Broman, 2000; Pillar, Malhotra, & Lavie, 2000; Ross, Ball, Sullivan, & Caroff, 1989; Sadeh, 1996; Van Reeth et al., 2000; Waters, Ad- ams, Binks, & Varnado, 1993). These sleep problems included difficulty falling asleep, fragmented sleep, and recurrent and fre- quent nightmares. A few studies have also shown that induced stress can increase arousal and delay sleep onset (Gross & Bork- ovec, 1982; Van Egeren, Haynes, Franzen, & Hamilton, 1983). However, other studies have failed to detect these disruptions or have documented more resilient sleep in association with stressful conditions or posttraumatic stress disorder (Dagan, Zinger, & Lavie, 1997; Lavie, Carmeli, Mevorach, & Liberman, 1991; Pillar et al., 2000).
Stress theories offer some rationale for these seemingly incon- sistent findings. Analysis of the relevant sleep and stress literature (Sadeh, 1996; Sadeh & Gruber, 2002) has led to the identification of two distinct modes of relevant response of the sleep–wake system: (a) the “turn on” response of the “alarm phase” (Selye, 1983), which is compatible with hypervigilance and incompatible with sleep, and (b) the “shut off” response of the stage of exhaus- tion (Selye, 1983), which leads to reduced activity, preservation of energy, and is compatible with extended sleep. The shut off response is also compatible with the conservation-withdrawal hy- pothesis (Engel & Schmale, 1972), which suggests that under conditions of severe and uncontrollable stress the organism tends to withdraw from activity and preserve energy until the circum- stances change.
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The post Avi Sadeh, Giora Keinan, and Keren Daon Tel Aviv University.The aim of this prospective quasi-experimental study was to assess the role of coping style as a factor moderating the relationship between stress and sleep. Sleep of 36 students was assessed by means of actigraphy and daily logs during low-stress and high-stress periods. The high-stress period was the week that the students were evaluated for acceptance to graduate programs in clinical psychology. The low-stress period was a regular academic week. appeared first on My Nursing Papers.
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