Targeted Intervention for Insufficient Sleep Among Typically-Developing Adolescents
NCT ID: NCT04163003
Last Updated: 2022-10-12
Study Results
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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COMPLETED
NA
82 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-10-24
2022-08-25
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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This study has two sub-studies: one for youth who experience behaviorally insufficient sleep syndrome (BISS) and one for youth who obtain sufficient sleep. This includes a randomized controlled trial for youth who obtain insufficient sleep (BISS), and a universal education (UE) only intervention for youth who obtain sufficient sleep.
All participants will complete a pre-consent screen. Those with sufficient sleep will complete consent/assent and a full screening assessment, and they will watch a sleep education video (UE). If eligible for the sufficient sleeper study, the full screening assessment will serve as a baseline assessment as well. Participants will complete a follow-up assessment about one month later.
Those who pre-screen as insufficient sleepers will complete consent/assent, complete a full screening process, and watch a sleep education video (UE). Those who remain eligible after the full screening process will complete a baseline assessment. Then, youth will be randomized to the TAPAS intervention or to a wait-list control (monitoring only). After completing the post-period 1 follow-up assessment, those in the wait-list control group will switch to the other arm, via a cross-over design. Participants in the intervention-first group will continue to receive the intervention iin Period 2 after post-period 1. After this period, participants will complete the post-period 2 follow-up assessment.
Detailed Description:
Participants. Youth ages 13-15 will be recruited through various methods (e.g., social media advertising, University research registry, flyers, email listservs and online magazines, and from the waiting room of the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Center for Adolescent and Young Adult Health (CAYAH)). Among those screened, the investigators will deliver universal education about sleep and conduct baseline and follow-up assessments among n=35 sufficient sleepers. Investigators will randomize n=50 with insufficient sleep to the TAPAS intervention or wait-list control (monitoring only). Overall, investigators plan to collect complete data on n=40 participants, after attrition.
Baseline assessments will include: measures of sleep (sleep diary and actigraphy), academic functioning, attention, affect, motivation, and risk behavior.
TAPAS Intervention. Program goals are to increase knowledge about healthy sleep practices, to increase sleep duration by going to bed earlier (sleep extension), and to increase regularity in sleep timing over the week by limiting oversleeping on the weekends. During the 45-60 minute intervention session, the youth and clinician will discuss the youth's sleep timing and quality and explore the youth's attitudes and social influences on sleep. The clinician will develop discrepancies between current sleep behavior and the youth's values and goals.
It is proposed that the 4-8-week text messaging/web-based portion of the intervention will begin immediately after the clinician session. Participants will receive twice-weekly summaries of their sleep based on diary entries. Participants will then be asked via the web if they'd like to modify their sleep, providing them with autonomy in their answer. Investigators will rely on strategies for extending and regularizing sleep.
Wait-List Control (monitoring only) Condition. The wait-list is proposed to last half the duration as the targeted intervention (4 vs 8 weeks). Participants will monitor sleep with the sleep diary, but they will not receive feedback or any other information on their sleep.
Participants will repeat the baseline assessments and 7 days of actigraphy at the end of Period 1 and at the end of Period 2 (only those randomized to Wait-List Control will cross-over to TAPAS intervention for Period 2).
Follow-up assessments will include: measures of sleep (sleep diary and actigraphy), academic functioning, attention, affect, motivation, and risk behavior.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
Participants who obtain sufficient sleep will not be randomized, but will obtain the universal education only. Investigators anticipate enrolling n=35 adolescents with sufficient sleep.
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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TAPAS
Participants will participate in the TAPAS intervention, which will consist of one in-person engagement session with a therapist and 8 weeks of web-based automated intervention prompts. The program will utilize empirically supported approaches for promoting sleep health, delivered in-person and via text-message, focusing on: tailored psychoeducation, motivation and efficacy to change sleep, extending sleep duration, and regularizing sleep timing across the week.
Targeted Approaches for Promoting Adolescent Sleep (TAPAS)
The targeted intervention is a three part sleep program, involving a 2- minute psychoeducation video, an in-person session with a clinician focusing on sleep, and web-based goal setting related to sleep behaviors. Intervention approaches to promoting adolescent sleep and reducing insufficient sleep use a motivational interviewing style, rooted in cognitive-behavioral strategies for improving sleep.
Sleep monitoring only, then TAPAS
Participants will participate in sleep monitoring only first, then participate in the TAPAS intervention. First, participants will monitor sleep with sleep diary, but they will not receive feedback or any other information on to sleep.TAPAS will consist of one engagement session with a therapist and 4 weeks of web-based automated intervention prompts. The program will utilize empirically supported approaches for promoting sleep health, delivered in-person and via text-message, focusing on: tailored psychoeducation, motivation and efficacy to change sleep, extending sleep duration, and regularizing sleep timing across the week. Sleep monitoring is proposed to last the same duration as the targeted intervention in this arm.
Targeted Approaches for Promoting Adolescent Sleep (TAPAS)
The targeted intervention is a three part sleep program, involving a 2- minute psychoeducation video, an in-person session with a clinician focusing on sleep, and web-based goal setting related to sleep behaviors. Intervention approaches to promoting adolescent sleep and reducing insufficient sleep use a motivational interviewing style, rooted in cognitive-behavioral strategies for improving sleep.
Sleep Monitoring Only
Participants will monitor sleep with sleep diary, but they will not receive feedback or any other information on to sleep.
Interventions
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Targeted Approaches for Promoting Adolescent Sleep (TAPAS)
The targeted intervention is a three part sleep program, involving a 2- minute psychoeducation video, an in-person session with a clinician focusing on sleep, and web-based goal setting related to sleep behaviors. Intervention approaches to promoting adolescent sleep and reducing insufficient sleep use a motivational interviewing style, rooted in cognitive-behavioral strategies for improving sleep.
Sleep Monitoring Only
Participants will monitor sleep with sleep diary, but they will not receive feedback or any other information on to sleep.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. sufficient sleep (\>7.5 hours of sleep);
3. willing/able to provide informed assent/consent.
Exclusion Criteria
Investigators will screen, deliver universal education (UE), and offer participation to all participants:
1. ages 13 years, 0 months to 15 years, 11 months;
2. able and willing to give informed assent to participate (with informed consent from parent);
3. insufficient sleep (≤7.5 hours sleep on average weeknights); and
4. weekend-weekday sleep timing shift \>=1.5 hours.
1. Evidence of mental retardation, pervasive developmental disorder, or organic central nervous system disorder will exclude potential participants;
2. unstable medical conditions;
3. use of psychotropic medications or medications known to impact sleep;
4. adolescent pregnancy;
5. clinical levels of psychopathology, except for youth with a sole diagnosis of gender dysphoria;
6. current sleep disorders except for sleep-onset insomnia;
7. extreme evening preference; and
8. Currently living \>1 hour outside of the greater Pittsburgh region.
Sufficient Sleepers:
1. Evidence of mental retardation, pervasive developmental disorder, or organic central nervous system disorder;
2. unstable medical conditions;
3. use of psychotropic medications or medications known to impact sleep;
4. adolescent pregnancy;
5. clinical levels of psychopathology, except for youth with a sole diagnosis of gender dysphoria;
6. current sleep disorders except for sleep-onset insomnia;
7. extreme evening preference; and
8. Currently living \>1 hour outside of the greater Pittsburgh region.
13 Years
15 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
University of Pittsburgh
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Jessica Levenson
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics
Principal Investigators
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Jessica C Levenson, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Pittsburgh
Locations
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University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Countries
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References
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Levenson JC, Goldstein TR, Wallace ML, Witt R, Harvey AG, Buysse D, Rofey DL, Suffoletto B, Miller E. A sleep promotion program for insufficient sleep among adolescents: a pilot feasibility randomized controlled trial. J Clin Sleep Med. 2025 Mar 1;21(3):529-541. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.11456.
Other Identifiers
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STUDY19080033
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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