Using Cognitive-Behavioral Change and Mobile Technology to Improve RN Sleep and Fatigue
NCT ID: NCT06105307
Last Updated: 2024-08-27
Study Results
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Basic Information
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ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
NA
76 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-02-15
2026-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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This project proposes to develop a sleep training program designed to meet the needs of RNs working shift work. As such, the training program, RN-SLEEP, would include shift work strategies, basics of sleep science and physiology, behavior change components, and strategies found in an effective behavioral sleep medicine treatment known as cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). The candidate, Dr. Hittle, has expertise in occupational health and safety, including sleep and shift work in the healthcare industry. Dr. Hittle has assembled a mentoring team of experts to guide her training in cognitive-behavioral sleep methods for integration into worker sleep interventions, intervention research with a focus on mHealth, and implementation science using a Total Worker Health approach. Dr. Hittle's short-term goal is to become an independent occupational health and safety scientist skilled in the use of methodologies and techniques required for intervention research and successful implementation in the workplace. This K01 proposal serves as an opportunity for Dr. Hittle to gain these skills and build a body of research focused on sleep training for workers. The resources, time, and, materials needed for this project are available through the University of Cincinnati (UC), the College of Nursing, and resources from Dr. Wong (Primary Mentor) at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Other UC-based resources include UCIT which will support Dr. Hittle's mobile application development and the Center for Clinical \& Translational Training and Science which offers services for K01 awardees in an effort to foster junior researchers.
This project has two aims:
1. To refine a mobile application, RN-SLEEP, to determine the training components of most interest to RNs when looking to improve their sleep.
2. To pilot test RN-SLEEP with a pretest-posttest, repeated measure study design to measure RN participant engagement with RN-SLEEP, appeal (e.g., aesthetics, ease of use), and the usefulness of the training contents to improve RN sleep over the study period versus an educational training on healthy living. This pilot test will also help the researchers better understand the functionality of study activities.
For aim 1, RN-SLEEP content refinement:
This qualitative component of the project will recruit 18-24 participants for focus group data collection. Participants will be recruited using a convenience sampling method and will be assigned as recruited (non-randomized) to one of three focus groups. Six to eight participants will be in each focus group. The first set of focus groups will be conducted to determine the best content to include in RN-SLEEP. RN-SLEEP content will be refined. Then, a second set of focus groups will occur, sharing the updated RN-SLEEP with participants for final feedback. Focus group sample sizes were determined based on the literature. Focus group data will be analyzed using a modified constant comparative analysis method.
For aim 2, RN-SLEEP intervention will be pilot-tested. Method for assigning participants to intervention versus control groups: Once participants are determined to be eligible for the study and informed consent is signed, the investigators will randomize participants to the RN-SLEEP intervention or educational control group. The investigators will use REDCap, a data management platform, to randomly assign participants, stratifying groups by self-reported sex.
Method for delivering the intervention: Baseline measures will be collected. Participants will then be asked to engage daily with the RN-SLEEP or educational control group, based on their assigned group, for four weeks. Post-intervention measures will be collected 4 and 8-weeks after the intervention period is complete.
Method for sample size determination: Our goal for recruitment is 76 participants (38 for each group). The investigators determined our sample size based on power calculations for our primary outcome measures (sleep duration and sleep quality) and based on the literature and previous work by the PI. The investigators increased the power calculation total sample goal of 58 total participants by 30% to account for any participants lost to attrition.
Method for data analysis:
Primary outcome measures (sleep duration, sleep quality): Descriptive statistics (i.e., means, 95% confidence intervals) will be used to describe characteristics and outcome variables for the overall study sample and each study group (intervention and education control). Between group differences for sleep duration and quality will be assessed using a two group independent t-test or Mann-Whitney U (if non-parametric testing needed). If statistical differences are noted between sleep duration and quality, appropriate statistical analyses will be completed with positively correlating covariates included in model.
Secondary outcome measures: Fatigue, other measures of Sleep Health (timing, regularity, efficiency, daytime sleepiness), Sleep efficacy and beliefs Descriptive statistics on fatigue, sleep beliefs, self-efficacy and remaining sleep health measures will be explored for pre-and-post-training data trends for the intervention and control groups.
Secondary outcome measures: Mobile App metrics for Acceptability, Usability, and Engagement The investigators will compute and report descriptive statistics on 4 and 8-week post-training acceptability, usability, and app engagement measures.
Other outcome measures: study feasibility measures The investigators will be monitoring recruitment and retention statistics throughout the study. The investigators will report on screened, screened eligible, and enrolled participants, and participant retention rates at 4 and 8-week post-training data collection.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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RN-SLEEP
Participants assigned to the RN-SLEEP group will access the training program via a mobile app for one month. The training app will include sleep physiology content, shift work strategies to promote sleep, cognitive behavior therapy for insomnia components, and skill-building techniques to support behavior modification.
RN-SLEEP
RN-SLEEP is a training program delivered via mobile application and designed to help improve the sleep of nurses who engage in shift work. RN-SLEEP aims to include training on strategies for sleeping while working shift work, basics of sleep science and physiology, behavior change components (i.e., goal setting), and components of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (i.e., relaxation).
Healthy Habit
Participants assigned to the Healthy Habit education control group will use a mobile app for one month focused on other healthy behaviors such as exercise tracking.
Healthy Habit - Educational Control
Healthy habit app (i.e., exercise tracking) to act as a control arm for the RN-SLEEP intervention
Interventions
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RN-SLEEP
RN-SLEEP is a training program delivered via mobile application and designed to help improve the sleep of nurses who engage in shift work. RN-SLEEP aims to include training on strategies for sleeping while working shift work, basics of sleep science and physiology, behavior change components (i.e., goal setting), and components of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (i.e., relaxation).
Healthy Habit - Educational Control
Healthy habit app (i.e., exercise tracking) to act as a control arm for the RN-SLEEP intervention
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* have access to a smart phone.
Exclusion Criteria
* who have a diagnosed sleep disorder.
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Washington State University
OTHER
University of Cincinnati
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Beverly Hittle
Assistant Professor
Locations
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University Of Cincinnati
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Countries
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References
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Hittle BM, Wong IS, Smith C, Honn KA, Hamill-Skoch S, Theil A, Lambert J, Gillespie GL. Understanding Nurses' Needs Regarding Tailored, Evidence-Based Sleep Education and Training. J Adv Nurs. 2025 Jul 18:10.1111/jan.70088. doi: 10.1111/jan.70088. Online ahead of print.
Other Identifiers
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