Sleep disparities and neighbourhood effects
SBI contributors
Project description
The prevalence of sleep disturbance, related with social status and privilege, is unevenly distributed within societies. Individual social determinants that are embedded within broader neighbourhood contexts intersect and jointly shape sleep disparities. This study incorporated a quantitative intersectional framework to better understand the structural inequalities in sleep disturbance, with a focus on the social-ecological model of sleep and how individual and social context factors interact.
Status
Completed
Selected publications
Alonso-Perez, E., Ding, X., Richter, D., Gellert, P. & O’Sullivan, J. L. (2025). Intersectional sleep disparities: association between multiple social intersections, perceived neighborhood deprivation and sleep disturbance in Europe. European Journal of Public Health. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckaf130