Disturbed Sleep and its Association with Poor Mental Health
Disturbed Sleep and its Association with Poor Mental Health
Sleep is an essential physiological process with a variety of functions. Disturbed sleep is common across mental health disorders and demonstrates a close relationship, with poor sleep predisposing to mental health problems, as well as being a symptom of them. I have conducted four studies into aspects of poor sleep and mental health using differing methodologies. Firstly, a meta-analysis into sleep and emotional reactivity in experimental studies (n=24 studies), which found that self-reported arousal ratings of negative stimuli were significantly increased post-sleep but not post-waking. However, such studies need more consistency in methodology. Secondly, a cross-sectional analysis of sleep measures on the Hamilton Anxiety and Hamilton Depression scales in a sample of young adult gamblers. This found that gambling disorder is associated with higher levels of anxiety and depression, reaching a clinical cut-off, as well as insomnia symptoms. Thirdly, I performed a longitudinal analysis of sleep symptoms as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) in the women who participated in the NiPPeR Randomised Controlled Trial. Group-based trajectory modelling identified that those reporting fewer hours of sleep at preconception typically also had shorter sleep during pregnancy and post-delivery. More than 30% of women had a clinically significant PSQI score >5 maintained throughout, indicating persistent substantial sleep difficulties. The group of worst sleepers had significantly higher levels of anxiety and depression throughout pregnancy. Finally, I examined the relationship between Vitamin D deficiency, sleep, depression and anxiety in the NiPPeR RCT. Sleep quality was worse in Vitamin D deficient participants only at preconception. There was a significantly higher level of depression in those who were Vitamin D deficient at preconception and at 7 weeks gestation, but not at 28 weeks gestation or at 6 months post-delivery. There was no impact of Vitamin D status on anxiety symptoms. Collectively this thesis underscores the close relationship between poor sleep and poor mental health. This research contributes to a more nuanced understanding of how sleep impacts mental health in different contexts. It focusses on specific under-researched groups including young adult gamblers and women in the perinatal period, who may present a future target for the primary prevention of mental health difficulties by addressing sleep problems at an earlier stage
sleep, mental health, Perinatal Depression, gambling disorder, Insomnia
University of Southampton
Austin, Holly Anne
800bd07e-f1eb-4393-beab-3cc54eb4992e
January 2026
Austin, Holly Anne
800bd07e-f1eb-4393-beab-3cc54eb4992e
Baldwin, David
1beaa192-0ef1-4914-897a-3a49fc2ed15e
Hill, Cathy
867cd0a0-dabc-4152-b4bf-8e9fbc0edf8d
Austin, Holly Anne
(2026)
Disturbed Sleep and its Association with Poor Mental Health.
University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 187pp.
Record type:
Thesis
(Doctoral)
Abstract
Sleep is an essential physiological process with a variety of functions. Disturbed sleep is common across mental health disorders and demonstrates a close relationship, with poor sleep predisposing to mental health problems, as well as being a symptom of them. I have conducted four studies into aspects of poor sleep and mental health using differing methodologies. Firstly, a meta-analysis into sleep and emotional reactivity in experimental studies (n=24 studies), which found that self-reported arousal ratings of negative stimuli were significantly increased post-sleep but not post-waking. However, such studies need more consistency in methodology. Secondly, a cross-sectional analysis of sleep measures on the Hamilton Anxiety and Hamilton Depression scales in a sample of young adult gamblers. This found that gambling disorder is associated with higher levels of anxiety and depression, reaching a clinical cut-off, as well as insomnia symptoms. Thirdly, I performed a longitudinal analysis of sleep symptoms as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) in the women who participated in the NiPPeR Randomised Controlled Trial. Group-based trajectory modelling identified that those reporting fewer hours of sleep at preconception typically also had shorter sleep during pregnancy and post-delivery. More than 30% of women had a clinically significant PSQI score >5 maintained throughout, indicating persistent substantial sleep difficulties. The group of worst sleepers had significantly higher levels of anxiety and depression throughout pregnancy. Finally, I examined the relationship between Vitamin D deficiency, sleep, depression and anxiety in the NiPPeR RCT. Sleep quality was worse in Vitamin D deficient participants only at preconception. There was a significantly higher level of depression in those who were Vitamin D deficient at preconception and at 7 weeks gestation, but not at 28 weeks gestation or at 6 months post-delivery. There was no impact of Vitamin D status on anxiety symptoms. Collectively this thesis underscores the close relationship between poor sleep and poor mental health. This research contributes to a more nuanced understanding of how sleep impacts mental health in different contexts. It focusses on specific under-researched groups including young adult gamblers and women in the perinatal period, who may present a future target for the primary prevention of mental health difficulties by addressing sleep problems at an earlier stage
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Submitted date: January 2026
Published date: January 2026
Keywords:
sleep, mental health, Perinatal Depression, gambling disorder, Insomnia
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 508550
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508550
PURE UUID: a0d5e1b9-9b9e-4fe9-b5ed-4c3fe509b5cf
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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2026 18:00
Last modified: 31 Jan 2026 03:08
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Author:
Holly Anne Austin
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