Abstract

BackgroundThe Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) Operational Research Kit-Actigraphy (WORK-A) is a set of unique practice parameters and actigraphy-derived measures for the analysis of operational military sleep patterns. The WORK-A draws on best practices from the literature and comprises 15 additional descriptive variables. Here, we demonstrate the WORK-A with a sample of United States Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) cadets (n = 286) during a month-long capstone pre-commissioning training exercise.MethodsThe sleep of ROTC cadets (n = 286) was measured by Philips Actiwatch devices during the 31-day training exercise. The preliminary effectiveness of the WORK-A was tested by comparing differences in sleep measures collected by Actiwatches as calculated by Philips Actiware software against WORK-A-determined sleep measures and self-report sleep collected from a subset of ROTC cadets (n = 140).ResultsActiware sleep summary statistics were significantly different from WORK-A measures and self-report sleep (all P ≤ 0.001). Bedtimes and waketimes as determined by WORK-A major sleep intervals showed the best agreement with self-report bedtime (22:21 ± 1:30 vs. 22:13 ± 0:40, P = 0.21) and waketime (04:30 ± 2:17 vs. 04:31 ± 0:47, P = 0.68). Though still significantly different, the discrepancy was smaller between the WORK-A measure of time in bed (TIB) for major sleep intervals (352 ± 29 min) and self-report nightly sleep duration (337 ± 57 min, P = 0.006) than that between the WORK-A major TIB and Actiware TIB (177 ± 42, P ≤ 0.001).ConclusionsDefault actigraphy methods are not the most accurate methods for characterizing soldier sleep, but reliable methods for characterizing operational sleep patterns is a necessary first step in developing strategies to improve soldier readiness. The WORK-A addresses this knowledge gap by providing practice parameters and a robust variety of measures with which to profile sleep behavior in service members.

Highlights

  • The Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) Operational Research Kit-Actigraphy (WORK-A) is a set of unique practice parameters and actigraphy-derived measures for the analysis of operational military sleep patterns

  • The WRAIR Operational Research Kit-Actigraphy (WORK-A) is a set of actigraphy-derived measures adapted from commercial industry standards for the analysis of sleep patterns that are specific to activeduty soldiers in operational domains

  • Sleep midpoint Time worn Daily sleep intervals (DSI) DSI bedtime (s) DSI waketime (s) Soldier sleep below minimum (SSBM)

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Summary

Introduction

The Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) Operational Research Kit-Actigraphy (WORK-A) is a set of unique practice parameters and actigraphy-derived measures for the analysis of operational military sleep patterns. Industrial operations have greater capacity to control or document work schedules [8], whereas conditions during military operations are unpredictable [9]. Given these differences in sleep patterns, sleep in the military operational context should be quantified differently than how it is in civilians. To accurately profile the uniquely erratic sleep patterns of soldiers in the military operational context, researchers on the Operational Research Team (ORT) at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) have developed the WRAIR Operational Research Kit-Actigraphy (WORK-A). The WORK-A is a set of actigraphy-derived measures adapted from commercial industry standards for the analysis of sleep patterns that are specific to activeduty soldiers in operational domains

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