248 Self-Reported Race, Street Race, and Sleep Quality & Hours During the COVID-19 Pandemic Outbreak

Sleep Pandemic
DOI: 10.1017/cts.2023.315 Publication Date: 2023-04-24T03:52:57Z
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Our objective is to assess whether street race a stronger predictor of sleep quality and hours than self-reported race. We also seek understand the association between quality/hours can be explained by experiences microaggressions. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This study uses data from National Couples’ Health Time Study (NCHAT), population-representative sample 20–60 year-olds (N=3,642) who were married or cohabiting during 2020-2021 when COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately negatively impacted racial ethnic minorities in U.S. (Boserup et al., Yip al.). During this time, incidents trauma increased (Tessler Using NCHAT we examine RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Results show that microaggressions mediate link identifying as Black being perceived Asian quality/hours. Identifying Asian, compared with non-Latinx White respondents, associated more frequent More are poorer fewer hours. marginally better In all models, less DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: With growing non-white population, wellbeing our future generations everyone’s best interest. Poor increases risk cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, cancer. The United States spends $93 billion excess medical care costs due health disparities.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
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