2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.apnr.2021.151412
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Sleep disorders among nurses and other health care workers in Poland during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Cited by 17 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…We detected that more than a quarter of our HCPs participants had IFG, and almost a quarter had hyperuricemia. In contradiction to the previous findings that confirmed HCPs tend to have worse sleep quality and duration (Abbas et al, 2021;Gupta et al, 2020;Krupa et al, 2021;Morisky et al, 2008;Zhou et al, 2021), our results showed that 72.4% of HCPs had a good sleep quality accompanied by a sleep duration of more than 6 hours. It seemed that the Covid19 pandemic did not affect the HCP's sleep quality and duration.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We detected that more than a quarter of our HCPs participants had IFG, and almost a quarter had hyperuricemia. In contradiction to the previous findings that confirmed HCPs tend to have worse sleep quality and duration (Abbas et al, 2021;Gupta et al, 2020;Krupa et al, 2021;Morisky et al, 2008;Zhou et al, 2021), our results showed that 72.4% of HCPs had a good sleep quality accompanied by a sleep duration of more than 6 hours. It seemed that the Covid19 pandemic did not affect the HCP's sleep quality and duration.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 99%
“…The Covid-19 pandemic significantly impacts sleep disorders, especially among healthcare practitioners (HCPs) (Gupta et al, 2020;Krupa et al, 2021). A similar report confirmed that sleep disruption had been found among health care practitioners, especially physicians, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (Alnofaiey et al, 2020), Kuwait (Abbas et al, 2021), and China (Zhou et al, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…We found that 97.88% of the 236 nurses performing nucleic acid testing had sleep disturbances and their sleep quality was worse than that in other studies, 27–37 in which the prevalence rate of sleep disturbance ranged from 12% to 87%. An analysis from Poland 38 using multiple comparisons showed that the greatest intensity of insomnia was statistically significant in subjects who had contact with patients with COVID-19 or knew about it, which was significantly higher than in subjects who did not have contact (H (2) =17.48; p < 0.001). This could be because of the different investigated sources.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Los pacientes con COVID-19 parecían ser el grupo más afectado, con una tasa combinada del 74,8%. Krupa S, et al 42 Polonia 2021 Estudio transversal realizado en 336 profesionales de la salud. El personal que atendió a pacientes con sospecha o confirmación de COVID-19, presentaron mayores efectos sobre la aparición de trastornos del sueño, predominando el insomnio.…”
Section: Insomnio Y Pandemia Covid-19unclassified