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 Research Information System University of Greifswald




Original article | published - printed | peer reviewed | Open Access

Socioeconomic factors do not predict sleep apnea in a population sample from Mecklenburg‑Western Pomerania, Germany


Sleep and Breathing 2023 / May ; 27(2): 459 - 467



https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35486311[PubMed]; https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11325-022-02614-1


Bibliometric indicators



Citations (WOS) = 0

DOI = 10.1007/s11325-022-02614-1

PubMed-ID = 35486311


Authors

Krüger M*1, Obst A2, Bernhardt O3, Ewert R2, Penzel T, Stubbe B2, Fietze I, Ivanovska T, Biffar R1, Daboul A1


Abstract

Purpose Socioeconomic factors are known to modulate health. Concerning sleep apnea, influences of income, education, work, and living in a partnership are established. However, results differ between national and ethnic groups. results also differ between various clinical studies and population-based approaches. The goal of our study was to determine if such factors can be verified in the population of Pomerania, Germany. Methods A subgroup from the participants of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania volunteered for an overnight polysomnography. Their data were subjected to an ordinal regressions analysis with age, sex, body mass index (BMI), income, education, work, and life partner as predictors for the apnea–hypopnea index. Results Among the subgroup (N = 1209) from the population-based study (N = 4420), significant effects were found for age, sex, and BMI. There were no significant effects for any of the socioeconomic factors. Conclusion Significant effects for well-established factors as age, sex, and BMI show that our study design has sufficient power to verify meaningful associations with sleep apnea. The lack of significant effects for the socioeconomic factors suggests their clinical irrelevance in the tested population.

Published in

Sleep and Breathing


Year 2023
Month/Hj May
Impact Factor (2023)
Volume 27
Issue 2
Pages 459 - 467
Open Access ja
Peer reviewed ja
Article type Original article
Article state published - printed
DOI 10.1007/s11325-022-02614-1
PubMed-ID 35486311

Common journal data

Short name: SLEEP BREATH
ISSN: 1520-9512
eISSN: 1522-1709
Country: GERMANY (FED REP GER)
Language: English
Categories:
  • RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
  • CLINICAL NEUROLOGY


Impact factor trend

Year Impact Factor
2008 1.672
2009 2.363
2010 1.684
2011 1.839
2012 2.256
2013 2.869
2014 2.482
2015 2.332
2016 2.288
2017 2.03
2018 2.326
2019 2.162
2020 2.816
2021 2.655
2022 2.5

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