Happily married women report less
insomnia.
by Splete, Heidi
BALTIMORE--Women who are happily married in midlife report fewer
sleep problems than unhappily married or unmarried women, based on data
from nearly 3,000 women.
Previous studies have shown that married people, especially women,
consistently report less insomnia, compared with their single or
divorced counterparts, said Wendy M. Troxel, Ph.D., a psychologist in
the department of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh. But her
study aimed to take a "more nuanced approach to the subject of
marriage and insomnia risk by asking whether unhappily or unmarried
women are at greater risk for having insomnia symptoms [when compared
with] happily married women," said Dr. Troxel, who presented the
results at the annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep
Societies.
The data came from the Study of Women's Health Across the
Nation (SWAN), an ongoing longitudinal study being conducted at seven
sites in the United States. The goal of SWAN is to characterize the
biological and psychosocial changes that occur during perimenopause. The
multiethnic study population included women aged 42-52 years at baseline
who were not pregnant or breast-feeding and who had an intact uterus.
In this study, Dr. Troxel and her colleagues used
participants' self-reports to evaluate 1,938 married women and 997
unmarried women. Women who reported night shift work were excluded.
Overall, most of the married women (83%) were categorized as
"happily married" in their current marriages, based on
single-item scores in the 4-7 range on the 7-point Likert scale. Choices
on this scale ranged from 1 ("extremely unhappy") to 7
("perfect"). The remaining 17% of married women had scores in
the 1-3 range, which characterized them as "unhappily
married."
Among the unmarried women, 40% were single, 54% were divorced or
separated, and 6% were widowed. Participants met the criteria for
insomnia if they reported one or more insomnia symptoms three or more
times per week. "Roughly a third of our group had any insomnia
symptoms three or more times a week, which is consistent with the
prevalence of insomnia in the epidemiologic literature," Dr. Troxel
said.
Overall, 45% of the unhappily married women and 40% of the
unmarried women met the insomnia criteria, compared with 30% of the
happily married women. The difference between the happily married women
and both the unmarried and unhappily married women was significant.
When the researchers analyzed the findings by ethnicity, the effect
of happy marriage on better sleep remained significant among subsets of
white, black, and Hispanic women, but not among Chinese or Japanese
women. Japanese women reported the largest percentage of happy marriage
(70%), and Chinese women reported the largest percentage of unhappy
marriage (15%). Black women reported the largest percentage of being
unmarried (52%).
The researchers also examined whether marital happiness was a proxy
for other psychosocial and demographic traits that affect insomnia risk.
But after adjustment for multiple factors, including age, education,
ethnicity, presence of children, employment, use of medication,
perceived health status, and "pretty much anything else we wanted
to throw into the model," the effects remained the same, Dr. Troxel
said.
The unhappily married and unmarried women were significantly more
likely to report three or more insomnia symptoms, compared with the
happily married women. But no significant differences were found in the
number of unhappily married vs. unmarried women who reported three or
more symptoms, which suggests that it is not marriage itself that is
beneficial for sleep, Dr. Troxel observed. "Marriage may be good
for women's sleep, but only if it is a happy one," she said.
The study was limited by its focus on older women; the results
might not be generalizable to younger women. Also, no data were
available on sleep problems before marriage. "We need to do studies
to examine the bidirectional effect of marriage on sleep, and we need
objective measures," Dr. Troxel said.
Dr. Troxel said her study was supported in part by a grant from the
National Institutes of Health.
BY HEIDI SPLETE
Senior Writer
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