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Health Educ Res. 2010 Jun;25(3):395-400. doi: 10.1093/her/cyq027. Epub 2010 Apr 21.

Treat the source not the symptoms: why thinking about sleep informs the social determinants of health.

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1
lhale@notes.cc.sunysb.edu

Abstract

Based on theoretical and empirical work, we argue that autonomy is likely an important underlying source of healthy sleep. The implication is that 'treatment' for sleep problems cannot be understood as an individual-level behavioral problem but must instead be addressed in concert with larger scale social factors that may be inhibiting high-quality sufficient sleep in large segments of the population. When sleep is understood as a proxy for health, the implications extend even further. Policies and interventions that facilitate the autonomy of individuals therefore may not only help reduce individual sleep problems but also have broader consequences for ameliorating social disparities in health.

PMID:
20410072
DOI:
10.1093/her/cyq027
[Indexed for MEDLINE]
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