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ÀӽŠÁß ¼ö¸éÀÇ Áú°ú »îÀÇ Áú Quality of Sleep and Quality of Life during Pregnancy

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±è±ÙÅÂ, ¹èÈ¿Àº, ¹èÁø°ï, Á¶¿ë¿ø,
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±è±ÙÅ ( Kim Keun-Tae ) 
Keimyung University School of Medicine Department of Neurology

¹èÈ¿Àº ( Bae Hyo-Eun ) 
Keimyung University School of Medicine Department of Neurology
¹èÁø°ï ( Bae Jin-Gon ) 
Keimyung University School of Medicine Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Á¶¿ë¿ø ( Cho Yong-Won ) 
Keimyung University School of Medicine Department of Neurology

Abstract


Background: The prevalence of sleep disorders increases as pregnancy progresses, which affects the health of pregnant women, fetal health, and the outcomes of pregnancy. The aim of this study is to evaluate the quality of sleep and life in pregnant women in Korea.

Methods: This study is a prospective cross-sectional, case-control study of pregnant women and age-matched controls. From July to September 2019, all participants completed Korean-language versions of the sleep questionnaires including Pittsburgh sleep quality index (K-PSQI), Insomnia severity index, Epworth sleepiness scale, Back¡¯s depression inventory-2 (K-BDI), STOP (Snoring, Tiredness, Observed apneas, and high blood Pressure), and short-form 36 (K-SF-36).

Results: A total of 422 participants consisted of 385 pregnant women and 137 controls. Second and third trimester were 200 and 185, respectively. K-PSQI scores were higher in pregnant women compared with the controls (7.87¡¾3.49 and 8.50¡¾3.55 vs. 5.79¡¾2.76, p<0.001). Total score of K-SF-36 was lowest in third trimester (62.07¡¾17.72) and highest in the control group (79.41¡¾13.36). There was no statistical difference between groups in K-BDI.

Conclusions: This study demonstrated worsening of sleep quality as well as life quality during pregnancy. More attention to sleep of pregnant women is needed.

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Pregnancy; Sleep; Sleep hygiene; Quality of life

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KCI
KoreaMed
KAMS