Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02783560 |
Other study ID # |
2286108 |
Secondary ID |
UL1TR001108 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
May 2016 |
Est. completion date |
September 2020 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2022 |
Source |
Indiana University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Despite the high prevalence of sleep difficulties in children with disruptive behavior
disorders, little is known about the role of sleep in treating disruptive behavior. The
current study evaluates the addition of a sleep intervention to an existing parent-training
program for caregivers of children ages 3-8 with disruptive behaviors. Objectives are to
examine the impact of a novel sleep treatment program on sleep, disruptive behavior, and
other measures of family functioning, utilizing a variety of self-report and objective
measures (e.g. actigraphy, electrodermal activity). The investigators hypothesize that sleep
intervention will result in improvements in sleep and disruptive behavior compared to control
group receiving a highly plausible addition to the standard parent training intervention, and
that sleep outcomes will moderate overall treatment success.
Description:
Overview: The current study, which is a collaboration between Indiana University at
Bloomington (PI: Bates) and Indiana University School of Medicine (PI: Honaker), seeks to
evaluate the impact of adding a sleep component to a parenting intervention that has been
shown to effectively treat disruptive behavior in children. A mealtime intervention will
serve as an active control for the sleep treatment component, as the mealtime intervention
targets changes in a family routine but is unlikely to significantly impact sleep.
Participants who receive the sleep component are expected to show significant improvements in
sleep compared to the mealtime group. The investigators further hypothesize that children
receiving the sleep intervention will have reduced presleep arousal levels compared to
baseline, and will show greater reduction in presleep arousal levels than the
mealtime/control group. Finally, because of the documented links between poor sleep and
externalizing behavior problems and theoretical arguments about sleep mechanisms supporting
emotional and behavioral self-regulation, the investigators hypothesize that the participants
who receive the sleep component will show greater reductions in disruptive behavior compared
to the mealtime/control group.
Participants and Design: Participants are 3-8-year-old children who exhibit disruptive
behaviors and their parents. Participants meeting criteria for the parent-training program
offered as part of the general clinic practice would be approached by the therapist to
discuss participation in the study. Following the consent procedure, they would be randomly
assigned to one of two groups. The sleep intervention group would receive a brief, novel
sleep intervention (The Sleep Train Program) in the context of the parenting program's
Setting Up for Success segment, which focuses on positive routines. Sleep would be addressed
briefly as needed in subsequent sessions. The mealtime/control group would not receive any
particular intervention or guidance regarding sleep, but would instead focus on the routine
of mealtimes. All families would then receive the same core intervention for disruptive
behavior. Following the completion of the data collection, families who received the sleep
component would receive the mealtime component, and vice versa.
Interventions: The existing parenting skills intervention is largely built on Troubled
Families: A Treatment Program, a manualized treatment approach with extensive empirical
support, selected as it is currently delivered by clinical psychology trainees at the
Psychological Clinic at Indiana University in Bloomington. The sleep intervention and control
intervention focusing on mealtime structure have been designed to be parallel in terms of
structure and length. Though neither intervention has been evaluated (both were developed for
this study), both incorporate treatment strategies with an empirical basis. The sleep
intervention focuses on sufficient sleep, healthy sleep habits, and a positive bedtime
routine, with optional modules to help address bedtime problems, night wakings, fears,
anxiety, and independent sleep. The mealtime intervention focuses on healthy mealtime habits
and mealtime routines, with optional modules to address picky eating and disruptive mealtime
behaviors.
Data collection and measures: Some data will be recorded daily throughout the study,
including parent diary measures of child sleep and the main child misbehaviors
(noncompliance, tantrums, aggression). Other data will be collected in 4 major assessments
periods. The baseline assessment will occur at the end of the initial assessment with the
family and prior to the first treatment session. The midpoint assessment will occur prior to
the start of the discipline intervention, approximately six week after the start of
treatment. This assessment period allows for evaluation of disruptive behavior and sleep
following the sleep component and an introductory segment (Setting Up for Success), but prior
to the initiation of the core disruptive behavior / parenting intervention. In other words,
any improvements in disruptive behavior could be attributed largely to the sleep or mealtime
addition rather than the core parenting intervention. The second midpoint assessment will
occur following the core intervention, but prior to initiating the sleep/mealtime component
not previously covered. This allows for the evaluation of the combined sleep and disruptive
behavior interventions, as well as a comparison in treatment outcomes for those who received
the sleep component and those who received the mealtime/control component. A final assessment
will occur following the conclusion of treatment. Survey data will be collected using on-line
forms created in REDCap, and completed on a tablet that will be loaned to the family.
Measures were selected to assess sleep, disruptive behavior, child daytime functioning more
generally, and family functioning. An actigraph is worn by the child for one week during each
of the four assessment periods, with interpretation aided by the accompanying sleep diary. An
Empatica E3 device will be used to assess electro dermal activity (EDA) as a measure of
presleep arousal. The child will be asked to wear this device each evening from the start of
the bedtime routine through sleep onset, at which point the parent is asked to remove the
device.
Individuals collaborating on this study include: John Bates PhD (co-PI), Indiana University
at Bloomington; Amy Williams PhD, Indiana University School of Medicine, and several graduate
students at Indiana University in Bloomington, specifically Maureen McQuillan, Caroline
Hoyniak, Brittany Rudd, and Kyle Gerst.