No. 35
April 2010
•h,^5; Quam
Statistical Brief
A Publication of the State Center for Health Statistics
1908 Mail Service Center • Raleigh, NC 27699-1908
(919) 733-4728 • www.schs.state.nc.us/SCHS
The Association of Insufficient Sleep with
Smoking, Obesity, Physical Inactivity, and Poor Quality of Life:
Results from the 2008 North Carolina
Behavorial Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) Survey
by
Harry Herrick
Introduction
It is estimated that sleep related problems, such as
chronic sleep-loss, affect 50 to 70 million Americans
of all ages.1 For public health, the extent and
repercussion of this problem has largely been under¬
recognized, and the public remains relatively un¬
informed of the health consequences associated with
prolonged and insufficient sleep. Research has found
that insufficient sleep is associated with a wide range
of adverse health conditions including hypertension,
diabetes, obesity, depression, heart attack, and stroke,
as well as various health risk behaviors, such as
smoking.2"4
It is only within the last decade that on-going,
population-based surveillance and research in
sleep disorders has gained national attention and
commitment. Recommendation 5.3 from the
2006 Institute of Medicine report, entitled, “Sleep
Disorders and Sleep Deprivation: An Unmet Public
Health Problem,”5 called upon the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the
National Center on Sleep Disorders Research to
support and expand surveillance of sleep patterns
in the U.S. population. In response, the CDC
introduced a question on insufficient sleep in the
2008 BRFSS Core Questionnaire, which consists
of CDC-sponsored questions asked by all 50 states
participating in the BRFSS Survey.
This study builds upon a previous study conducted
by researchers at the CDC. Using 2002 BRFSS
survey data from an 18-state pilot study of the
insufficient sleep question, the authors (Strine and
Chapman) examined the association of frequent sleep
insufficiency with poor quality of life and selected
health risk behaviors.6 Frequent sleep insufficiency
(high risk) was defined as a dichotomous measure,
i.e., respondent report of 14 or more days in the
past 30 days of insufficient sleep, versus the report
of less than 14 or no days of insufficient sleep (low
risk). The results from the Strine and Chapman
study revealed that frequent sleep insufficiency was
strongly associated with poor quality of life, including
smoking, physical inactivity, and heavy drinking
among males.
nc department
of health and
human services
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
Department of Health and Human Services
Division of Public Health
North Carolina
Public Health