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This study examined the association between race/ethnicity and objectively measured sleep characteristics in a large sample of older men. Black men had significantly shorter total sleep time (6.1 hr vs. 6.4 hr), longer sleep latency (28.7 min vs. 21.9 min), lower sleep efficiency (80.6% vs. 83.4%), and less slow-wave sleep (4.9% vs. 8.8%) than White men, even after controlling for social status, comorbidities, body mass index, and sleep-disordered breathing. Hispanic men slept longer (6.7 hr) at night than Black (6.1 hr) and Asian American men (6.1 hr). This study supports significant variations in sleep characteristics in older men by race/ethnicity.
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Yeonsu Song
University of California, Los Angeles
Sonia Ancoli‐Israel
Boston University
Cora E. Lewis
Preventive Cardiology
Behavioral Sleep Medicine
University of California, San Diego
Case Western Reserve University
University of Alabama at Birmingham
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Song et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1275b4d3ce54256966c4bb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15402002.2012.636276