Abstract

Sleep quality is an important clinical construct since it is increasingly common for people to complain about poor sleep quality and its impact on daytime functioning. Moreover, poor sleep quality can be an important symptom of many sleep and medical disorders. However, objective measures of sleep quality, such as polysomnography, are not readily available to most clinicians in their daily routine, and are expensive, time-consuming, and impractical for epidemiological and research studies., Several self-report questionnaires have, however, been developed. The present review aims to address their psychometric properties, construct validity, and factorial structure while presenting, comparing, and discussing the measurement properties of these sleep quality questionnaires. A systematic literature search, from 2008 to 2020, was performed using the electronic databases PubMed and Scopus, with predefined search terms. In total, 49 articles were analyzed from the 5734 articles found. The psychometric properties and factor structure of the following are reported: Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), Athens Insomnia Scale (AIS), Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), Mini-Sleep Questionnaire (MSQ), Jenkins Sleep Scale (JSS), Leeds Sleep Evaluation Questionnaire (LSEQ), SLEEP-50 Questionnaire, and Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS). As the most frequently used subjective measurement of sleep quality, the PSQI reported good internal reliability and validity; however, different factorial structures were found in a variety of samples, casting doubt on the usefulness of total score in detecting poor and good sleepers. The sleep disorder scales (AIS, ISI, MSQ, JSS, LSEQ and SLEEP-50) reported good psychometric properties; nevertheless, AIS and ISI reported a variety of factorial models whereas LSEQ and SLEEP-50 appeared to be less useful for epidemiological and research settings due to the length of the questionnaires and their scoring. The MSQ and JSS seemed to be inexpensive and easy to administer, complete, and score, but further validation studies are needed. Finally, the ESS had good internal consistency and construct validity, while the main challenges were in its factorial structure, known-group difference and estimation of reliable cut-offs. Overall, the self-report questionnaires assessing sleep quality from different perspectives have good psychometric properties, with high internal consistency and test-retest reliability, as well as convergent/divergent validity with sleep, psychological, and socio-demographic variables. However, a clear definition of the factor model underlying the tools is recommended and reliable cut-off values should be indicated in order for clinicians to discriminate poor and good sleepers.

Highlights

  • The term sleep quality is commonly used in sleep medicine and can refer to a collection of sleep measures including Total Sleep Time (TST), Sleep Onset Latency (SOL), sleep maintenance, Total Wake Time (TWT), Sleep Efficiency (SE), and sometimes sleep disruptiveInt

  • It was developed to quantify sleep quality [21] and, in the majority of studies that validate a sleep questionnaire, the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) has been used as convergent validity, suggesting that the PSQI can be considered as an accepted reference or gold standard for self-perceived sleep quality

  • The open-ended items were scored as categorical values as per the range of values reported by the patients

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Summary

Introduction

The term sleep quality is commonly used in sleep medicine and can refer to a collection of sleep measures including Total Sleep Time (TST), Sleep Onset Latency (SOL), sleep maintenance, Total Wake Time (TWT), Sleep Efficiency (SE), and sometimes sleep disruptiveInt. Sleep quality appears to be orthogonal to the term sleep quantity. The presence of sleep complaints has been reported even when SOL, Wakefulness After Sleep Onset (WASO), TST and awakening were similar to those reported in normal non-complaining individuals [2]. Complaints of disturbed (or poor quality) sleep have been confirmed in almost every country [3] and among patients in all specialties of medicine [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Poor sleep can severely affect daytime performance, both socially and at work, and increases the risk of occupational and automobile accidents, poor quality of life and poor overall health [14]. The assessment of sleep quality appears to be relevant for epidemiological and clinical studies

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