Sleep and Divorce: Identifying Bidirectional Vulnerability and Resilience (ICPSR 35875)

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Richard R. Bootzin, University of Arizona

This is an external resource to which ICPSR links as a courtesy. These data are not available from ICPSR. Users should consult the data owners (via Sleep and Divorce: Identifying Bidirectional Vulnerability and Resilience) directly for details on obtaining these resources.

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This project uses a longitudinal framework that integrates multiple methodologies to examine psychological distress, sleep, and social engagement outcomes in a sample of 120 recently separated or divorced participants (from 18-70 years of age, equal numbers of men and women). At monthly assessments across 5 months, participants complete a psychological assessment battery and one week of sleep diaries. At the first, third, and fifth months, all participants wear an actiwatch for one week that measures activity and how well individuals sleep. They also wear an electronically activated recorder that provides snippets of ambient sound from participants' environments.

United States Department of Health and Human Services. National Institutes of Health. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (1R01HD069498)
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  1. NICHD funded the PRIMARY DATA COLLECTION of this project.

  2. DSDR has tried to identify a link which points directly to where the study data reside. In cases where this was not possible a link pointing to the PI's Web site is provided, so users may contact the PI directly regarding access to the data.

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