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Prevalence of probable shift work disorder in non-standard work schedules and associations with sleep, health and safety outcomes: A cross-sectional analysis

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Version 2 2021-07-23, 04:33
Version 1 2021-07-22, 22:50
journal contribution
posted on 2021-07-23, 04:33 authored by Amy ReynoldsAmy Reynolds, Sally FergusonSally Ferguson, Sarah L Appleton, Meagan CrowtherMeagan Crowther, Yohannes Adama Melaku, Tiffany K Gill, Shantha MW Rajaratnam, Robert J Adams
Purpose: We aimed to estimate the prevalence of probable shift work disorder (pSWD) in a representative sample of Australian workers and identify sleep, health and safety correlates. Patients and Methods: In 2019, data were collected from working respondents as part of a cross-sectional national sleep health survey conducted online (n=964 total; n=448 individuals on non-standard work schedules). We established the prevalence of pSWD according to International Classification of Sleep Disorders criteria (ICSD-R, ICSD-2 and ICSD-3). Poisson regression was used to determine crude and adjusted prevalence association (prevalence ratio, PR) of pSWD with sleep, health and safety outcomes. Results: Overall prevalence of pSWD in workers on non-standard work schedules was 10.5%, ranging from 9.6% in early morning workers to 12.7% in rotating shift workers. In adjusted models, workers who met the criteria for pSWD were 1.8 times more likely to report both depression/bipolar disorder, and anxiety/panic disorder, and 1.7 times more likely to report work errors due to a sleep problem. Conclusion: The prevalence of pSWD in employees engaged in non-standard work schedules is influenced by selection of factors used to quantify pSWD, including sleep/wake patterns. Higher likelihoods of mental health problems and workplace errors in those with pSWD highlight the importance of intervention and management of this under-recognised sleep disorder.

History

Volume

13

Start Page

683

End Page

693

Number of Pages

11

eISSN

1179-1608

ISSN

1179-1608

Location

New Zealand

Publisher

Dove Medical Press

Publisher License

CC BY-NC

Additional Rights

CC BY NC 3.0

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2021-05-03

External Author Affiliations

University of Adelaide; Monash University; Flinders University

Author Research Institute

  • Appleton Institute

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Electronic-eCollection

Journal

Nature and Science of Sleep