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Sleep quality is associated with psychosocial functioning and health‐related quality of life in pediatric transplant recipients
Authors:Ana M Gutierrez‐Colina  Lauren F Quast  Cyd K Eaton  Julia LaMotte  Mary G Stolz  Laura Mee  Roshan George  Jennifer Lee  Bonney Reed  Kristin Loiselle Rich  Ronald L Blount
Abstract:This study examined patient‐reported sleep quality in a single‐center cross‐sectional sample of adolescents with solid organ transplants and evaluated associations between sleep quality, psychosocial functioning (ie, depression/anxiety symptoms), and HRQOL. Health disparities associated with minority race/ethnicity and socioeconomic variables were also examined. Sixty‐nine adolescents (M = 16.51 years; SD = 1.63) who received a solid organ transplant (kidney: n = 25; liver: n = 24; heart: n = 20) completed self‐report measures of sleep quality, psychosocial functioning, and HRQOL. Adolescent transplant recipients endorsed significantly lower levels of sleep quality (ie, falling asleep) compared with previously published norms of healthy peers (t = ?3.60; P ≤ .001). Higher sleep quality was significantly associated with fewer anxiety and depressive symptoms (r = ?.31 to ?.40), and higher physical and psychosocial HRQOL (r = .33‐.43). Adolescents from minority backgrounds had significantly worse sleep quality compared with non‐Hispanic Whites. Adolescent transplant recipients, particularly those from minority backgrounds, may be at increased risk for experiencing poor sleep quality. Suboptimal sleep is a risk factor for higher levels of anxiety and depressive symptoms, as well as lower levels of physical and psychosocial HRQOL. Sleep is an important modifiable factor that, if improved, may contribute to lower anxiety/depressive symptoms and better HRQOL in adolescent transplant recipients.
Keywords:health disparities  health‐related quality of life  psychosocial functioning  sleep
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