摘要

Background: Studies suggest that sleep quality and duration are significantly associated with mortality risk and health conditions, yet such studies are seldom conducted among very old adults. The objective of this study was to examine associations between self-reported sleep quality/duration and subsequent mortality/health among very old adults in China. A second objective determines whether these associations vary by age and gender. Methods: This study used data of the 2005 and 2008 waves from a large, representative survey with a total of 12,671 individuals in 22 provinces in mainland China, in which 3158 respondents were aged 90-99 and 2293 were centenarians. Two self-reported questions about sleep quality and duration were examined while adjusting for numerous socio-demographic, family/social support, health practices, and baseline health factors. Results: Hazard regressions showed that, when demographic factors are controlled for, Chinese elders who report poor and fair quality of sleep have 26% and 10% higher risk of death over the next three years compared to those with good sleep quality; those who sleep either 6 h or less or 10 h or more per day have an 18-22% higher mortality risk as compared to those who sleep 8 h per day. The increased mortality risks of poorer sleep and too short or too long sleep duration are larger in men than in women and more robust in the oldest-old than in young elders. Logistic regressions show that poor sleep and daily sleep durations of 5 h or less or 10 h or more are also associated with worse health three years later. Conclusions: Poorer sleep quality and too short or too long sleep duration are associated with higher subsequent mortality risk and lower odds of being in a healthy state among very old Chinese.