Sleep Quality as a Critical Pathway Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Multimorbidity and the Impact of Lifestyle
Julia L. Sheffler, Zhuo Meng, Natalie Sachs-Ericsson, Viviana G. Caimary, Juhi Patel, Scott Pickett- Geriatrics and Gerontology
- Community and Home Care
- Gerontology
Objectives
This study aims to establish the effects of ACEs on multimorbidity through sleep quality and investigate whether lifestyle factors (e.g., eating habits and exercise) may influence this relationship among middle-aged and older adults.
Methods
Participants were drawn from a cross-sectional sample of community dwelling older adults ( N = 276, 55+) and three waves of data from the Midlife in the United States study (MIDUS, N = 843). We examined the direct and indirect effects of ACEs, sleep quality, and health conditions, as well as the conditional effects of physical activity and eating habits.
Results
Across both samples, sleep quality mediated the relationship between ACEs and chronic health conditions. Moderating effects of unhealthy eating and physical activity differed between samples.
Discussion
Sleep quality is an important pathway connecting ACEs and adult multimorbidity, and health behaviors may provide targets for intervention particularly in older adults.