# Late-life Disability May Increase with More Frequent Insomnia Symptoms and Sleep Medications Use Over Time

**Authors:** Tuo Yu Chen, Soomi Lee, Orfeu Buxton

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3100 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

Older adults with frequent insomnia and sleep medication use experience greater disability over time, suggesting that managing sleep issues and medication could help prevent disability.

## Contribution

The study reveals that frequent sleep medication use amplifies the negative impact of insomnia on disability in older adults.

## Key findings

- Disability scores increased by 0.20 for every unit increase in insomnia symptoms frequency.
- Sleep medication use was linked to a 0.19 increase in disability scores annually.
- Frequent sleep medication use worsened disability more than insomnia symptoms alone.

## Abstract

This study investigated whether disability status increased with the frequency of insomnia symptoms and sleep medication usage over a 5-year period and whether frequent use of sleep medication modified the longitudinal effects of insomnia symptoms on disability among community-dwelling older adults.

Data were from the National Health and Aging Trends Study (2011-2015; n = 6,722). Disability was assessed with a validated disability index. Insomnia symptoms were assessed by the average frequency of longer sleep onset latency and trouble staying asleep. General sleep medication usage frequency was assessed. Multilevel modeling was used to analyze the data, considering health status, demographic information, and risky health behavior.

In the conditional growth model, for every one-unit higher in the frequency of insomnia symptoms and sleep medication usage, disability scores increased by 0.20 (SE = .02, p < .001) and 0.19 (SE = .02, p < .001) every year, respectively, adjusting for covariates. Moreover, the frequency of sleep medication usage influenced the relationship between insomnia symptoms and disability. Specifically, more frequent insomnia symptoms were associated with higher disability scores, and using sleep medications more often led to an even greater increase in disability scores than insomnia symptoms alone.

Disability increased with more frequent insomnia symptoms and more frequent sleep medication usage each year. More frequent sleep medication usage has detrimental implications on disability beyond insomnia symptoms. Treating insomnia and managing sleep medication properly may help prevent disability among older adults.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763687