RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Sleep disturbance and medical requests among university and college students in Chongqing, China JF Saudi Medical Journal JO Saudi Med J FD Prince Sultan Military Medical City SP 1153 OP 1159 DO 10.15537/smj.2023.44.11.20230420 VO 44 IS 11 A1 Wang, Ting A1 Yin, Jiuheng A1 Hu, Chen A1 Tang, Wanzhen A1 Che, Xiaowen A1 Liu, Ying YR 2023 UL http://smj.org.sa/content/44/11/1153.abstract AB Objectives: To investigate the prevalence of sleep disturbance, sleep patterns, sleep-related factors, and medical demands among university and college students in Chongqing, China.Methods: Demographic data and responses to the sleep problem questionnaire (SPQ) were collected from 1973 students from 11 universities and 10 colleges between November 2022 and January 2023.Results: The prevalence of sleep disturbance in university and college students was different in different periods (58.17% during campus lockdown and 40.30% after the lifting of lockdown). The combined prevalence was 49.72%. The prevalence of the 6 types of sleep disturbance showed the same trend. The average sleep latency was 32.79 minutes and the average sleep duration was 7.53 hours. Male, university students, upper-class students, history of depression, academic stress, major life events, bad bedroom environment, and campus lockdown were factors related to sleep disturbance among respondents. Most of the respondents (52.09%) had no medical care requests, and the major reasons were a lack of access to medical care (75.15%), economic pressure (68.49%), concerns regarding curative effects (58.51%), and academic pressure (56.56%).Conclusion: The prevalence of sleep disturbance for university and college students was obviously improved after the lifting of campus lockdown, and the major factors related to sleep disturbance were study, life, mental health, and sleep environment. The students examined herein reported relatively low medical care requests when they experience sleep disturbance.