Evaluation of Severe Insomnia In The General Population: Results of a European Multinational Survey
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 13 (4_Suppl) , 21S-24S
- https://doi.org/10.1177/026988119901304s04
Abstract
The epidemiology of severe insomnia and its effect on quality of life and healthcare consumption was assessed in a survey of the general population of five northern European countries. Applying established consumer sampling techniques, insomnia sufferers were selected from the general population using a questionnaire, conducted by face-to-face interview, and severity of insomnia was ranked (severe, mild/moderate, no sleep complaint) using a specific algorithm. Population samples were matched according to case control methodology for age, gender and geographical region. A second questionnaire gathered information on sleep problems, quality of life (SF-36 scores) and healthcare consumption. The prevalence of severe insomnia ranged from 4% to 22%, was higher in females than in males, but did not increase significantly with age. Patients with severe insomnia had been experiencing sleeping problems for a median of 2–6 years. In all countries, insomnia had a negative impact on quality of life, and the degree of impairment in quality of life was directly related to the severity of insomnia. Individuals with severe insomnia also showed a higher level of healthcare consumption. Despite this, severe insomnia did not appear to feature prominently in the doctor-patient relationship.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assessment of the SF-36 version 2 in the United KingdomJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1999
- DSM–IV and ICSD–90 insomnia symptoms and sleep dissatisfactionThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1997
- Special Report From a Symposium Held by the World Health Organization and the World Federation of Sleep Research Societies: An Overview of Insomnias and Related Disorders—Recognition, Epidemiology, and Rational ManagementSleep, 1996
- Sleep DisturbancePharmacoEconomics, 1996
- Impact of Insomnia on Health-Related Quality of LifePharmacoEconomics, 1996
- The Socioeconomic Impact of InsomniaPharmacoEconomics, 1996
- Employee and job attributes as predictors of absenteeism in a national sample of workers: The importance of health and dangerous working conditionsSocial Science & Medicine, 1991
- Biopsychobehavioral correlates of insomnia, V: Clinical characteristics and behavioral correlatesAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1984
- Prevalence of sleep disorders in the Los Angeles metropolitan areaAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1979