TY - JOUR
T1 - Pandemic nightmares: Effects on dream activity of the COVID-19 lockdown in Italy
AU - Scarpelli, Serena
AU - Alfonsi, Valentina
AU - Mangiaruga, Anastasia
AU - Musetti, Alessandro
AU - Quattropani, Maria Catena
AU - Lenzo, Vittorio
AU - Freda, Maria Francesca
AU - Lemmo, Daniela
AU - Vegni, Elena
AU - Borghi, Lidia
AU - Saita, Emanuela
AU - Cattivelli, Roberto
AU - Castelnuovo, Gianluca
AU - Plazzi, Giuseppe
AU - De Gennaro, Luigi
AU - Franceschini, Christian
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - COVID-19 has critically impacted the world. Recent works have found substantial changes in sleep and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic. Dreams could give us crucial information about people's well-being, so here we have directly investigated the consequences of lockdown on the oneiric activity in a large Italian sample: 5,988 adults completed a web-survey during lockdown. We investigated sociodemographic and COVID-19-related information, sleep quality (by the Medical Outcomes Study-Sleep Scale), mental health (by the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales), dream and nightmare frequency, and related emotional aspects (by the Mannheim Dream Questionnaire). Comparisons between our sample and a population-based sample revealed that Italians are having more frequent nightmares and dreams during the pandemic. A multiple logistic regression model showed the predictors of high dream recall (young age, female gender, not having children, sleep duration) and high nightmare frequency (young age, female gender, modification of napping, sleep duration, intrasleep wakefulness, sleep problem index, anxiety, depression). Moreover, we found higher emotional features of dream activity in workers who have stopped working, in people who have relatives/friends infected by or who have died from COVID-19 and in subjects who have changed their sleep habits. Our findings point to the fact that the predictors of high dream recall and nightmares are consistent with the continuity between sleep mentation and daily experiences. According to the arousal-retrieval model, we found that poor sleep predicts a high nightmare frequency. We suggest monitoring dream changes during the epidemic, and also considering the implications for clinical treatment and prevention of mental and sleep disorders.
AB - COVID-19 has critically impacted the world. Recent works have found substantial changes in sleep and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic. Dreams could give us crucial information about people's well-being, so here we have directly investigated the consequences of lockdown on the oneiric activity in a large Italian sample: 5,988 adults completed a web-survey during lockdown. We investigated sociodemographic and COVID-19-related information, sleep quality (by the Medical Outcomes Study-Sleep Scale), mental health (by the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales), dream and nightmare frequency, and related emotional aspects (by the Mannheim Dream Questionnaire). Comparisons between our sample and a population-based sample revealed that Italians are having more frequent nightmares and dreams during the pandemic. A multiple logistic regression model showed the predictors of high dream recall (young age, female gender, not having children, sleep duration) and high nightmare frequency (young age, female gender, modification of napping, sleep duration, intrasleep wakefulness, sleep problem index, anxiety, depression). Moreover, we found higher emotional features of dream activity in workers who have stopped working, in people who have relatives/friends infected by or who have died from COVID-19 and in subjects who have changed their sleep habits. Our findings point to the fact that the predictors of high dream recall and nightmares are consistent with the continuity between sleep mentation and daily experiences. According to the arousal-retrieval model, we found that poor sleep predicts a high nightmare frequency. We suggest monitoring dream changes during the epidemic, and also considering the implications for clinical treatment and prevention of mental and sleep disorders.
KW - adverse events
KW - continuity hypothesis
KW - health
KW - mental sleep activity
KW - sleep
KW - adverse events
KW - continuity hypothesis
KW - health
KW - mental sleep activity
KW - sleep
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/178894
U2 - 10.1111/jsr.13300
DO - 10.1111/jsr.13300
M3 - Article
SN - 0962-1105
SP - 1
EP - 10
JO - Journal of Sleep Research
JF - Journal of Sleep Research
ER -