Citation
Eshkoor, Sima Ataollahi and Tengku Abdul Hamid, Tengku Aizan and Hassan Nudin, Siti Sa'adiah and Chan, Yoke Mun
(2013)
The effects of social support and having a partner on sleep quality in dementia.
American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease & Other Dementias, 28 (3).
pp. 253-257.
ISSN 1533-3175; ESSN: 1938-2731
Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed to determine the effects of social support and having a partner on sleep quality in the elderly patients with dementia. Methodology: This research was conducted on 1210 noninstitutionalized elderly Malaysian individuals with dementia. The effects of age, ethnicity, educational level, marital status, sex differences, social support, and having a partner on sleep quality were evaluated in the respondents. The multiple logistic regression analysis was used to predict the risk of sleep disturbances among the participants. Results: Approximately, 41% of the participants experienced sleep disruption. Further findings showed that ethnicity (odds ratio [OR] = 0.62), social support (OR = 1.35), marital status (OR = 2.21), educational level (OR = 0.65), and having a partner (OR = 0.45) significantly affected sleep quality (P < .05). Sex differences and age were unrelated predictors of sleep disturbances (P > .05). Conclusion: It was concluded that social isolation and being single increased sleep disruption among respondents, but having a partner and ethnic non-Malay decreased the rate of sleep problems.
Download File
Preview |
|
PDF (Abstract)
The effects of social support and having a partner on sleep quality in dementia.pdf
Download (85kB)
| Preview
|
|
Additional Metadata
Actions (login required)
|
View Item |