Abstract

ObjectivesTo document sleep duration differences between rural and nonrural adults in middle/older adulthood. MethodsData consisted of adults aged 50-80 from the 2014, 2016, 2018, and 2020 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (n = 669,978). Hierarchical multinomial logistic regression models were fit predicting self-reported short (ie, 6 or fewer hours per 24-hour period) and long (ie, 9 or more hours per 24-hour period) compared to normal-sleep duration (ie, 7-8hours per 24-hour period). ResultsRural adults aged 50+ had slightly but significantly lower levels of short sleep (30.0% vs. 30.8%), and slightly but significantly higher levels of long sleep (10.6% vs. 9.4%). In multinomial logistic models that accounted for demographics, rural adults had significantly higher levels of long sleep (OR 1.16, 95% CI 1.12-1.21). The long-sleep differences were explained by socioeconomic measures. ConclusionsSleep researchers should continue to investigate and conceptualize sleeping patterns and heterogeneity among rural adults.

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