The Effects of a Parental Intervention on Electronic Media Exposure and Sleep Patterns in Adolescents

NCT ID: NCT02365025

Last Updated: 2015-02-18

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

70 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2011-02-28

Study Completion Date

2013-12-31

Brief Summary

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Amongst adolescents, there is a gap that widens with age between recommended sleep duration and actual sleep time. Due to this gap, bodily and mental functions such as those related to the metabolic and immune systems, performance, memory, school achievement and creative ability can be harmed. Moreover, lack of sleep involves an increased risk of accidents and injuries, behavior problems and reduced quality of life.

Biological factors that explain changes in sleep patterns include delays in the circadian timing system and in the homeostatic system that regulate sleep and wakefulness. These changes cause a growing and continuous delay in sleep phase during adolescence. In addition, a number of environmental factors affect sleep patterns: variables such as early school start time, increased homework assignments, after-school activities, lack of parental demand for adequate sleep hours, and increased "screen time," or use of electronic media, including television, computer games, internet and cellular phones.

Based on the Parental Style model, the authoritative parenting style is characterized by parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand and displaying high levels of responsiveness to their children on the other. The authoritarian parenting style is characterized by parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand yet displaying low levels of responsiveness to their children on the other. The permissive parenting style is characterized by parents setting low demands on their children and displaying high levels of responsiveness to their children. In several investigations, the authoritative parenting style has been shown to have a positive influence on child development, academic achievement and psychosocial competency, and promoted healthy behaviors in adolescents, such as good eating habits, increased physical activity and a decrease in risky behaviors such as smoking, alcohol abuse, extreme diets and early sexual behavior.

The Conceptual Model views parents as the sole agents of change in their children's life, and focuses on the power of personal example, environmental changes and promotion of the authoritative parental style. The main aim of this research is to evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention program that deals with increasing parents' awareness of the changes that characterize adolescents and encourages the authoritative parental style based on the Parenting Style Model.

Detailed Description

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Amongst adolescents, there is a gap that widens with age between recommended sleep duration and actual sleep time. Due to this gap, bodily and mental functions such as those related to the metabolic and immune systems, performance, memory, school achievement and creative ability can be harmed. Moreover, lack of sleep involves an increased risk of accidents and injuries, behavior problems and reduced quality of life.

Biological factors that explain changes in sleep patterns include delays in the circadian timing system and in the homeostatic system that regulate sleep and wakefulness. These changes cause a growing and continuous delay in sleep phase during adolescence. In addition, a number of environmental factors affect sleep patterns: variables such as early school start time, increased homework assignments, after-school activities, lack of parental demand for adequate sleep hours, and increased "screen time," or use of electronic media, including television, computer games, internet and cellular phones.

Based on the Parental Style model, the authoritative parenting style is characterized by parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand and displaying high levels of responsiveness to their children on the other. The authoritarian parenting style is characterized by parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand yet displaying low levels of responsiveness to their children on the other. The permissive parenting style is characterized by parents setting low demands on their children and displaying high levels of responsiveness to their children. In several investigations, the authoritative parenting style has been shown to have a positive influence on child development, academic achievement and psychosocial competency, and promoted healthy behaviors in adolescents, such as good eating habits, increased physical activity and a decrease in risky behaviors such as smoking, alcohol abuse, extreme diets and early sexual behavior.

The Conceptual Model views parents as the sole agents of change in their children's life, and focuses on the power of personal example, environmental changes and promotion of the authoritative parental style. This model has been found to be effective in the field of eating disorders but has never been implemented in the field of sleep.

The main aim of this research is to evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention program that deals with increasing parents' awareness of the changes that characterize adolescents and encourages the authoritative parental style based on the Parenting Style Model; it also encourages parents to make environmental changes at home based on the Conceptual Model in order to promote healthy behaviors including healthy sleep patterns and controlled exposure to electronic media in young normative adolescents (ages 10-12) .

Research Hypotheses:

Hypothesis 1: There is a link between availability and the amount of time spent using electronic media. Adolescents who have media devices in their rooms are exposed for longer hours to electronic media compared to those who do not have media devices in their rooms. In addition, there is a link between the availability of the media devices and sleep patterns. Adolescents who have media devices in their rooms will show delayed sleep patterns and shorter sleep durations compared to those who do not.

Hypothesis 2: There is a connection between parental style, sleep patterns and media exposure habits in young adolescents. Children of parents with an authoritative style would exhibit proper sleep patterns and exposure to electronic media; and children whose parents have an authoritarian parental style would have longer sleep durations and less exposure to electronic media compared with other parenting styles. It was assumed that children whose parents exhibit the permissive parental style would have shorter sleep duration and more exposure to electronic media compared to other parenting styles.

Hypothesis 3: There is a connection between sleep patterns, media exposure habits and quality of life in young adolescents. The study will find that better sleep patterns and lower exposure to electronic media are related to higher quality of life in young adolescents.

Hypothesis 4: The intervention program based on the Conceptual Model will lead to an increase in parents' knowledge about the changes that characterize adolescents and will promote the authoritative parental style.

Hypothesis 5: The intervention program will lead to an improvement in healthy behaviors, including better sleep patterns, controlled use of electronic media, better quality of life of young adolescents.

Method The sample included 70 dyads of parents (mostly mothers) and adolescents from schools in the Jezreel Valley. The experimental group and the control group each consisted of 35 participants (35 girls) of average age 10.7 (0.9) years. There were three sessions of data collection: 1. baseline, 2. immediately following intervention, 3. three months post-intervention. Parents and adolescents reported on electronic media consumption, sleep patterns and quality of life. In addition, parents reported on their parenting styles and adolescents wore an ActiGraph (for monitoring their sleep patterns) and filled in a sleep diary for five days. Parents in the experimental group participated in six workshops, while parents in the control group received information regarding healthy sleep habits and the effects of excessive media exposure by mail and were expected to read it on their own.

Conditions

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Sleep

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NON_RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Experimental group

Step 1: Patients and parents enrolment. Step 2: The parents of the children assigned to the experimental group will fill a questionaire related to familial and social background, electronic media exposure and sleep characteristics of their children.

Step 3: Parents of the children assigned to this group will participate in 6 meetings guides by experts in sleeping disorders. In those meeting the parents will be exposed to sleep disturbances, the importance of sleep habits and the influence of electronic media on sleep and learning.

Step 4: Re evaluation by questioners after the 6 meetings participation. Step 5: 3 months follow up after the intervention (Meetings).

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Meetings guides by experts in sleeping disorders.

Intervention Type OTHER

meetings guides by experts in sleeping disorders. In those meeting the parents will be exposed to sleep disturbances, the importance of sleep habits and the influence of electronic media on sleep and learning.

Control group

Step 1: Patients and parents enrolment. Step 2: The parents of the children assigned to the control group will fill a questionaire related to familial and social background, electronic media exposure and sleep characteristics of their children.

Step 3: Parents of the children assigned to this group will not participate in the meetings as described in the experimental group.

Step 4: Re evaluation by questioners after the time that the experimental group participated in the meetings.

Step 5: 3 months follow up.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Meetings guides by experts in sleeping disorders.

meetings guides by experts in sleeping disorders. In those meeting the parents will be exposed to sleep disturbances, the importance of sleep habits and the influence of electronic media on sleep and learning.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Teenagers aged 10 to 12 years, Hebrew speaking and healthy.
* Hebrew speaking parents.

Exclusion Criteria

* Teenagers suffering from chronic diseases of diseases that leads to learning disabilities.
* Teenagers who live in homes without exposure to electronical media.
Minimum Eligible Age

10 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

12 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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HaEmek Medical Center, Israel

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Dr Koren Ariel

Head of Pediatric Dept B

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Ariel Koren, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

HaEmek Medical Center - Afula - IsRAEL

Other Identifiers

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0075-10-EMC

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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