We examined the dose-response relationship between long sleep duration and health outcomes including mortality and the incidence of diabetes mellitus, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, stroke, coronary heart diseases, obesity, depression and dyslipidemia. We collected data from 5,134,036 participants from 137 prospective cohort studies. For the independent variable, we categorized participants at baseline as having long sleep duration or normal sleep duration. Risk ratios (RRs) for mortality and incident health conditions during follow-up were calculated through meta-analyses of adjusted data from individual studies. Meta-regression analyses were performed to investigate the association between each outcome and specific thresholds of long sleep. Long sleep was significantly associated with mortality (RR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.31-1.47), incident diabetes mellitus (1.26, 1.11-1.43), cardiovascular disease (1.25, 1.14-1.37), stroke (1.46, 1.26-1.69), coronary heart disease (1.24, 1.13-1.37), and obesity (1.08, 1.02-1.15). Long sleep was not significantly related to incident hypertension (1.01, 0.95-1.07). Insufficient data were available for depression and dyslipidemia. Meta-regression analyses found statistically significant linear associations between longer sleep duration and increased mortality and incident cardiovascular disease. Future studies should address whether the relationship between long sleep and health outcomes is causal and modifiable.
This study showed that the use of mobile phones for calling and for sending text messages after lights out is associated with sleep disturbances among Japanese adolescents. However, there were some limitations, such as small effect sizes, in this study. More studies that examine the details of this association are necessary to establish strategies for sleep hygiene in the future.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.