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New‐onset and exacerbated insomnia symptoms during the COVID‐19 pandemic in US military veterans: A nationally representative, prospective cohort study
Author(s) -
McCarthy Elissa,
DeViva Jason C.,
Na Peter J.,
Pietrzak Robert H.
Publication year - 2022
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.13450
Subject(s) - pandemic , insomnia , medicine , psychiatry , mental health , demography , psychology , covid-19 , disease , sociology , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Summary The COVID‐19 pandemic has had a negative impact on physical and mental health worldwide. While pandemic‐related stress has also been linked to increased insomnia, scarce research has examined this association in nationally representative samples of high‐risk populations, such as military veterans. We evaluated pre‐ and pandemic‐related factors associated with new‐onset and exacerbated insomnia symptoms in a nationally representative sample of 3,078 US military veterans who participated in the National Health and Resilience in Veterans Study. Veterans were surveyed in the USA in 11/2019 (pre‐pandemic) and again in 11/2020 (peri‐pandemic). The Insomnia Severity Index was used to assess severity of insomnia symptoms at the pre‐ and peri‐pandemic assessments. Among veterans without clinical or subthreshold insomnia symptoms pre‐pandemic ( n = 2,548), 11.5% developed subthreshold (10.9%) or clinical insomnia symptoms (0.6%) during the pandemic; among those with subthreshold insomnia symptoms pre‐pandemic ( n = 1,058; 26.0%), 8.0% developed clinical insomnia symptoms. Pre‐pandemic social support (21.9% relative variance explained), pandemic‐related stress related to changes in family relationships (20.5% relative variance explained), pre‐pandemic chest pain (18.5% relative variance explained) and weakness (11.1% relative variance explained), and posttraumatic stress disorder (8.2% relative variance explained) explained the majority of the variance in new‐onset subthreshold or clinical insomnia symptoms during the pandemic. Among veterans with pre‐pandemic subthreshold insomnia, pandemic‐related home isolation restrictions (59.1% relative variance explained) and financial difficulties (25.1% relative variance explained) explained the majority of variance in incident clinical insomnia symptoms. Taken together, the results of this study suggest that nearly one in five US veterans developed new‐onset or exacerbated insomnia symptoms during the pandemic, and identify potential targets for prevention and treatment efforts.