High prevalence of sleep disorders detected in Yverdon-les-Bains – Net24

High prevalence of sleep disorders detected in Yverdon-les-Bains – Net24 Green


Scientists from EPFL and Haute École d’Ingénierie et de Gestion du Canton de Vaud (HEIG-VD), working in partnership with the City of Yverdon-les-Bains, have analyzed the sleep quality of a sample of the city’s residents. They discovered that sleep disorders are much more common there than elsewhere in the country.

Study participants were asked to complete an online psychometric questionnaire about their sleeping patterns. Some 90% of respondents were found to have diminished sleep quality, while around 15% reported daytime sleepiness. These are just two key findings of the study, published recently in Journal of Affective Disorders.

“These figures should serve as a wake-up call for public health officials,” says Philippe Voruz, the study’s first author and a postdoc in the Geospatial Molecular Epidemiology (GEOME) research group within EPFL’s Laboratory for Biological Geochemistry.Poor sleep quality can be the result of a broader health condition like depression, or of external factors such as stress, financial worries, air pollution and traffic noise.” Voruz, a practicing neuropsychologist, and his colleagues plan to recruit additional study participants in the coming years to flesh out their findings.

A nationwide problem

According to the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health (OFSP), a third of Swiss residents suffer from sleep disorders – a percentage that’s been rising steadily for the past 25 years. Chronic insomnia alone costs the country CHF 10 billion per year, and it’s just one type of sleep disorder. A study similar to the one in Yverdon-les-Bains was carried out in Geneva Canton between 2021 and 2023 and revealed that 50% to 60% of the population there suffered from sleep deficiency. That study was led by the Geographic Information Research and Analysis in Population Health (GIRAPH) Laboratory, co-founded by Stéphane Joost, one of the Yverdon-les-Bains study’s authors. Joost is a researcher at the Geneva University Hospitals (HUG) Unit of Population Epidemiology and a senior scientist at EPFL.

From left to right: co-authors Philippe Voruz, postdoctoral researcher at EPFL’s Geospatial Epidemiology Group (GEOME) led by Stéphane Joost, senior scientist, Daniel Rappo, full professor at HEIG-VD and director of the Media Engineering Institute (MEI), and Quentin Tonnerre, head of Promotion and Health for the city of Yverdon-les-Bains. EPFL/Alain Herzog – CC-BY-SA 4.0

Real vs. perceived sleep quality

As part of the Yverdon-les-Bains study, the scientists combined the questionnaire data (which included participants’ addresses) with maps of Yverdon-les-Bains in order to identify clusters of sleep disturbances. This showed that the problem is spread across the city and affects all demographic groups. Some neighborhoods were found to have a higher prevalence of sleep disorders than others; these were generally lower-income areas with little public transport and high levels of traffic noise. “Yet the residents of these neighborhoods are the ones who reported having better sleep quality than the others,” says Voruz. “They’re also those who attest to taking more sleeping pills and who have a longer sleep latency. This suggests there’s a gap between perceived sleep quality and the results of more objective measures.”

The scientists’ map (see below) provides useful insights for city officials who want to improve the well-being of their residents. It also gives objective evidence that social inequality can lead to a relatively lower quality of life, which can ultimately take its toll on people’s health. What’s more, the map shows exactly where officials should target efforts to reduce traffic noise and air pollution in order to tackle the problem of poor sleep.

The next step will be to work closely with Yverdon-les-Bains city officials to hold information sessions and workshops

Philippe Voruz

Early detection

The research team stresses that early detection is crucial to preventing sleep disorders from becoming chronic – especially since chronic sleep disorders are known to increase the risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease and cognitive impairment. “The next step will be to work closely with Yverdon-les-Bains city officials to hold information sessions and workshops for people in the at-risk neighborhoods we identified,” says Voruz. “Then we’ll run the survey again, one year later, to see if those measures were effective. There are a lot of misconceptions about what constitutes a good night’s sleep” (see the inset). “Our goal is to give people the tools to improve their quality of life where it’s really needed.”

A citizen science initiative

In addition to participating in this study, Yverdon-les-Bains city officials have taken other proactive measures to improve their residents’ well-being. Policymakers began measuring the impact of urban environments on public health in 2019, initially through a regional health evaluation and subsequently through the Urbasan citizen science initiative. Urbasan, developed jointly by EPFL, HEIG-VD, HUG and Unisanté, is open to municipal officials who want to address urban health issues.

Promoting public health

EPFL introduced a new master’s program in Urban Systems this year with a possible specialization in “Health and well-being in the urban environment.” This specialization teaches students how georeferenced data can be coupled with data on public health and the urban environment to design targeted prevention measures – like those explored in the Yverdon-les-Bains study – and implement them.

Self-reported sleep quality

The questionnaire used in the study was the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), a self-assessment form asking participants to evaluate their sleeping patterns over a one-month period. The PSQI is available online for free.

The PSQI measures the following seven factors:
– Subjective sleep quality
– Sleep latency
– Sleep duration
– Habitual sleep efficiency
– Sleep disorders
– Use of sleeping pills
– Daytime dysfunction

Funding

The first author is financed by institutional funds from EPFL, obtained by the study’s PI (Dr. Stéphane Joost). Funding for the development of the platform was contributed by the general secretariat for culture and urban development of the City of Lausanne, the roads and transportation department of the City of Lausanne, the sports and physical activity department of the City of Yverdon-les-Bains, the Swiss center of expertise in life course research of the University of Lausanne (LIVES), and the center for primary care and public health (Unisanté) of the University of Lausanne.

References

Philippe Voruz, Marco Vieira Ruas, Noé Fellay, Noemi Romano, Michelangelo Mussini, Mathieu Saubade, Vincent Faivre, Vincent Gremeaux, Ophélia Jeanneret, Quentin Tonnerre, Marie-Noëlle Domon-Aubort, Dario Spini, Bengt Kayser, Daniel Rappo, Stéphane Joost, “Cluster-specific urban contexts associated with high levels of sleep impairment and daytime sleepiness: Findings from the Urbasan collaborative study”, Journal of Affective Disorders, 1 August 2025. 10.1016/j.jad.2025.04.133


Author: Sandrine Perroud

Source: EPFL

(CC Int’l 4.0)

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