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Volume 8

Epidemiology: Open Access

ISSN: 2161-1165

Epidemiology 2018

September 17-19, 2018

September 17-19, 2018 | Rome, Italy

8

th

International Conference on

Epidemiology & Public Health

Exposure to outdoor artificial night time light and use of hypnotic medications

Jin-Young Min

and

Kyoung-Bok Min

Seoul National University, Republic of Korea

O

utdoor artificial nighttime light is increasingly recognized as a form of environmental pollution. Excessive nighttime light

exposure, whether from indoor or outdoor sources, has a number of deleterious effects on human health. We performed

a population-based cohort study in South Korea to assess a possible association between outdoor nocturnal lighting and

insomnia in older adults, as measured by prescriptions for hypnotic drugs. This study used data from the 2002-2013

National Health Insurance Service-National Sample Cohort (NHIS-NSC), and a total of 52,027 adults who met aged

≥60 years were included as study subjects. Light data was based on satellite mapping of artificial light. The use of hypnotics

was extracted from the NHIS-NSC records, and two drugs, zolpidem (N05CF02) and triazolam (N05CD05), were

analysed for this study. Among the study cohort, 11,738 had prescriptions for hypnotic drugs. Increasing outdoor artificial

nighttime light exposure (stratified by quartile) was associated with increased prevalence of hypnotic prescriptions and

daily dose intake. Compared with subjects living in the lowest Quartile 1, the regression coefficients for prescription days

and daily defined doses of all hypnotics and certain hypotonic drugs were significantly higher among those living in area

with higher outdoor artificial nighttime light (Quartile 2 - 4). We found that outdoor artificial nighttime light exposure was

significantly associated with prescription of hypnotic drugs in older adults. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that

even outdoor artificial nighttime light may cause sleep disturbances.

Epidemiology (Sunnyvale) 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2161-1165-C1-021