Heather R. Altier
Gratitude and sleep disturbance in primary care patients: the mediating roles of health self-efficacy, health behaviors, and psychological distress
Altier, Heather R.; Hirsch, Jameson K.; Weber, Annemarie; Kohls, Niko; Schelling, Jörg; Sirois, Fuschia M.; Toussaint, Loren L.; Offenbächer, Martin
Authors
Jameson K. Hirsch
Annemarie Weber
Niko Kohls
Jörg Schelling
Professor Fuschia Sirois fuschia.sirois@durham.ac.uk
Professor
Loren L. Toussaint
Martin Offenbächer
Abstract
Introduction: Sleep disturbances are prevalent among primary care patients, and psychological dysfunction, including stress, anxiety, and depression, are robust contributors to poor sleep health. Yet, the presence of potential protective characteristics, such as health self-efficacy and engaging in adaptive health behaviors, may mitigate such outcomes. Gratitude (i.e., recognition and appreciation of experiences, relationships, and surroundings), a positive psychological cognitive-emotional characteristic, may serve as a catalyst of these beneficial downstream effects, given its association with improved health functioning and sleep. Methods: In a sample of primary care patients (N = 869, M age = 53; 60.7% female) from 50 urban and 30 rural practices in Germany, health self-efficacy (i.e., belief in ability to perform necessary actions to manage health) and constructive health behaviors (i.e., actions taken to modify health positively), separately and together as parallel first-order mediators, and stress, anxiety, and depression, as parallel second-order mediators, were investigated as potential serial mediators of the association between gratitude and sleep disturbances. Participants completed self-report measures in person and online. Results: Significant serial mediation was observed across models, although effects varied. In the first model, gratitude was associated with greater health self-efficacy and, in turn, to less stress (a1d21b4 = −0.019, 95% CI [−0.039, −0.002], SE = 0.010), anxiety (a1d31b5 = −0.026, 95% CI [−0.045, −0.008], SE = 0.009), and depression (a1d41b6 = −0.020, 95% CI [−0.040, −0.003], SE = 0.009), and fewer consequent sleep disturbances. In the second model, health behaviors, and anxiety (a1d31b5 = −0.009, 95% CI [−0.019, −0.002], SE = 0.004) and depression (a1d41b6 = −0.007, 95% CI [−0.016, −0.001], SE = 0.004), were serial mediators, but health behaviors and stress were not. In a final combined model, serial mediation occurred on two pathways, health self-efficacy and anxiety (a1d41b6 = −0.026, 95% CI [−0.046, −0.009], SE = 0.009), and health self-efficacy and depression (a1d51b7 = −0.019, 95% CI [−0.037, −0.003], SE = 0.009), and a specific indirect effect was found for health behaviors (a2b4= −0.086, 95% CI [−0.140, −0.030], SE = 0.026), but not self-efficacy. Discussion: Overall, gratitude was associated with reduced sleep disturbances through positive health behavior engagement, and via the serial mediation effects of greater health self-efficacy and lower psychological distress. Clinical interventions that enhance gratitude (e.g., gratitude listing or diaries), self-efficacy (e.g., disease self-management programs), or health behavior engagement (e.g., weight management programs) may promote favorable downstream effects on psychological distress and sleep disturbances among primary care patients.
Citation
Altier, H. R., Hirsch, J. K., Weber, A., Kohls, N., Schelling, J., Sirois, F. M., Toussaint, L. L., & Offenbächer, M. (2025). Gratitude and sleep disturbance in primary care patients: the mediating roles of health self-efficacy, health behaviors, and psychological distress. Frontiers in Sleep, 4, https://doi.org/10.3389/frsle.2025.1459854
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Mar 19, 2025 |
Online Publication Date | Apr 17, 2025 |
Publication Date | Apr 17, 2025 |
Deposit Date | Jun 4, 2025 |
Publicly Available Date | Jun 4, 2025 |
Journal | Frontiers in Sleep |
Electronic ISSN | 2813-2890 |
Publisher | Frontiers Media |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 4 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.3389/frsle.2025.1459854 |
Keywords | sleep disturbance, health self-efficacy, psychological distress, primary care, insomnia, gratitude, health behaviors |
Public URL | https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3901627 |
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This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the
original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is
permitted which does not comply with these terms.
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