Study suggests sleep deprivation may aggravate frailty's effects on mental health in older adults
A new study published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society that examined their combined effect of sleep deprivation and frailty suggests that short sleep intensifies the impacts of frailty on depressive symptoms.
Washington: A new study published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society that examined their combined effect of sleep deprivation and frailty suggests that short sleep intensifies the impacts of frailty on depressive symptoms.
Among 5,026 community-dwelling older adults in China, participants who were frail at the start of the study were more likely to later develop depressive symptoms.
Also Read |
Spending too much time on social media can affect your mental health
Also, those who experienced worsening frailty throughout the study tended to develop higher levels of depression.
It suggested that exercise and mindfulness-based stress reduction might help alleviate the negative effects of frailty on psychological well-being.
"We hope our research findings raise people's awareness of the combined effect of frailty and sleep on older adults' mental health, and provide implications for interventions to improve sleep quality for prefrail and frail older adults," said co-author Xinyi Zhao, PhD, of Peking University, in Beijing. (ANI)
Also Read |
Afternoon naps are important for better mental readiness