
Depression and Sleep Quality in Outpatients attending Penjaringan Primary Health Care, North Jakarta: A Cross-sectional Study
Author(s) -
Felicia Handoko,
Surilena Hasan,
Erfen Gustiawan,
Nelly Tina Widjaja
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the indonesian medical association
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2654-3796
pISSN - 2089-1067
DOI - 10.47830/jinma-vol.70.10-2020-247
Subject(s) - pittsburgh sleep quality index , depression (economics) , medicine , sleep disorder , cross sectional study , sleep (system call) , affect (linguistics) , psychiatry , primary care , sleep quality , physical therapy , insomnia , psychology , family medicine , communication , pathology , computer science , economics , macroeconomics , operating system
Depression is the most common mental disorder. Depression of outpatients in primary health care is frequently unrecognized. It might affect sleep quality, which is associated with worse quality of life, poor medication adherence, higher morbidity, and mortality. The study aimed to determine the association between depression and sleep quality of outpatients in Penjaringan Primary Health Care, Jakarta. Method: This research was observational analytic using a cross-sectional approach involving 434 outpatients in Penjaringan Primary Health Care, Jakarta. The study was conducted from August until September 2019. Instruments used in this research were the demographic questionnaire, the Zung Self-Rating Depression (SDS) questionnaire, and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire. Data analytics were bivariate. Results: There were 19.1% of respondents had depression, including 12.2% mild depression, 5.8% moderate depression, and 1.2% severe depression. There were 53.5% of respondents had poor sleep quality. There was a significant relationship (p<0.001, OR=7.814) between depression and sleep quality in outpatients. The results also showed that depression scores were moderately correlated with sleep disturbances (r=0.434). Conclusion: This study showed a high prevalence of depression and poor sleep quality among outpatients. Depression was associated with a 7.8 times higher risk of having poor sleep quality and also correlated with the components of sleep quality especially sleep disturbance.