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Work stressors, depressive symptoms and sleep quality among US Navy members: a parallel process latent growth modelling approach across deployment
Author(s) -
Bravo Adrian J.,
Kelley Michelle L.,
Swinkels Cindy M.,
Ulmer Christi S.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of sleep research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1365-2869
pISSN - 0962-1105
DOI - 10.1111/jsr.12624
Subject(s) - software deployment , stressor , sleep (system call) , military deployment , psychology , depression (economics) , clinical psychology , military personnel , medicine , psychiatry , computer science , law , political science , economics , macroeconomics , operating system
Summary The present study examined whether work stressors contribute to sleep problems and depressive symptoms over the course of deployment (i.e. pre‐deployment, post‐deployment and 6‐month reintegration) among US Navy members. Specifically, we examined whether depressive symptoms or sleep quality mediate the relationships between work stressors and these outcomes. Participants were 101 US Navy members who experienced an 8‐month deployment after Operational Enduring Freedom/Operation Iraqi Freedom. Using piecewise latent growth models, we found that increased work stressors were linked to increased depressive symptoms and decreased sleep quality across all three deployment stages. Further, increases in work stressors from pre‐ to post‐deployment contributed to poorer sleep quality post‐deployment via increasing depressive symptoms. Moreover, sleep quality mediated the association between increases in work stressors and increases in depressive symptoms from pre‐ to post‐deployment. These effects were maintained from post‐deployment through the 6‐month reintegration. Although preliminary, our results suggest that changes in work stressors may have small, but significant implications for both depressive symptoms and quality of sleep over time, and a bi‐directional relationship persists between sleep quality and depression across deployment. Strategies that target both stress and sleep could address both precipitating and perpetuating factors that affect sleep and depressive symptoms.