CDC logo
Safer Healthier People
CDC Home CDC Search CDC Health Topics A-Z
NIOSH - National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

Skip navigation links Search NIOSH  |  NIOSH Home  |  NIOSH Topics  |  Site Index  |  Databases and Information Resources  |  NIOSH Products  |  Contact Us

Search for NIOSH Publications: NIOSHTIC-2

NIOSHTIC-2 Search Results

      Advanced Search  |  Help  |  About  |  Feedback 
Terms: Association of active and passive smoking
1 - 1 of 2 Bibliographic entries
Save All   |   Save Page
View Saved    |    Download
Select check boxes to automatically save entries, or use 'save all' or 'save page' links above.
Back to Results
Association of active and passive smoking with sleep disturbances and short sleep duration among Japanese working population.
Authors
Nakata-A; Takahashi-M; Haratani-T; Ikeda-T; Hojou-M; Fujioka-Y; Araki-S
Source
Int J Behav Med 2008 Apr; 15(2):81-91
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10705500801929577 
NIOSHTIC No.
20034123 
Abstract
Background: the relationship between passive smoking and sleep is uncertain. Purpose: to examine the association of passive/active smoking with sleep disturbances. Method: 732 women and 1,896 men, working in a suburb of Tokyo, were surveyed using a self-administered questionnaire. Information on smoking, passive smoking exposure, and sleep was elicited. Exposure levels to passive smoking were assessed separately at work and at home as no, occasional, or regular exposure. Risk of sleep disturbances according to smoking status was estimated using logistic regression with odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) as measures of association. Results: compared to never smokers, odds of difficulty awakening in the morning (DAM) in current smokers were significantly higher,for women (OR 1.95) and men (OR 1.50), while increased difficulty initiating sleep (OR 1.88) and decreased early morning awakening (OR 0.31) were found only in women. Never smoking men occasionally exposed to passive smoking at work but not at home had increased odds (OR 1.81) of short sleep duration (SSD, < 6 h) than unexposed counterparts. Conclusions: the analyses suggest that exposure to passive smoking at work is associated with SSD in men, while current smoking relates to various subtypes of sleep disturbances in both sexes.
Keywords
Sleep-disorders; Smoke-inhalation; Humans; Men; Women; Tobacco-smoke; Tobacco
CODEN
IJBMFT
Publication Date
20080401
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
cji5@cdc.gov
Fiscal Year
2008
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Issue of Publication
2
ISSN
1070-5503
Source Name
International Journal of Behavioral Medicine
State
OH
Page 1 of 2

File Formats Help:

Adobe PDF file
How do I view different file formats (PDF, DOC, PPT, MPEG) on this site?double arrows.