Open Access
Sleep duration and health in adults: an overview of systematic reviews
Author(s) -
JeanPhilippe Chaput,
Caroline Dutil,
Ryan B. Featherstone,
Robert Ross,
Lora Giangregorio,
Travis J. Saunders,
Ian Janssen,
Veronica J. Poitras,
Michelle E. Kho,
Amanda RossWhite,
Julie Carrier
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
applied physiology, nutrition and metabolism/applied physiology, nutrition, and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.789
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1715-5320
pISSN - 1715-5312
DOI - 10.1139/apnm-2020-0034
Subject(s) - medicine , systematic review , duration (music) , population , gerontology , cohort study , sleep (system call) , medline , environmental health , art , literature , political science , computer science , law , operating system
The objective of this overview of systematic reviews was to examine the associations between sleep duration and health outcomes in adults. Four electronic databases were searched in December 2018 for systematic reviews published in the previous 10 years. Included reviews met the a priori determined population (community-dwelling adults aged 18 years and older), intervention/exposure/comparator (various levels of sleep duration), and outcome criteria (14 outcomes examined). To avoid overlap in primary studies, we used a priority list to choose a single review per outcome; reviews that examined the effect of age and those that looked at dose–response were prioritized. A total of 36 systematic reviews were eligible and 11 were included. Reviews included comprised 4 437 101 unique participants from 30 countries. Sleep duration was assessed subjectively in 96% of studies and 78% of studies in the reviews were prospective cohort studies. The dose–response curves showed that the sleep duration that was most favourably associated with health was 7–8 h per day. Modification of the effect by age was not apparent. The quality of the evidence ranged from low to high across health outcomes. In conclusion, the available evidence suggests that a sleep duration of 7–8 h per day is the one most favourably associated with health among adults and older adults. (PROSPERO registration no.: CRD42019119529.) Novelty This is the first overview of reviews that examines the influence of sleep duration on a wide range of health outcomes in adults. Seven to 8 h of sleep per day was most favourably associated with health. Effect modification by age was not evident.