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Sleep clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06131944 Active, not recruiting - Sleep Clinical Trials

A Combined School- and Home-Based Sleep Promotion Program

Start date: March 26, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this single group trial is to test the feasibility and acceptability of a combined school- and home-based sleep promotion program for young children prior to the kindergarten transition.

NCT ID: NCT06131034 Recruiting - Sleep Clinical Trials

Does Perioperative Music Prevent Sleep Disturbances in Hospitalized Surgical Patients

DREAMERS
Start date: August 9, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Sleep disturbances are known to be a prevalent problem in hospitalized, surgical patients, which is of importance since sleep disturbances can lead to a range of negative health outcomes. Music interventions have shown potential in improving sleep quality. Unfortunately, the studies on the effect of music on sleep in surgical patient populations are still scarce and of low quality. Therefore, the aim of this study is to study the effect of music on sleep quality in oncological, gastro-intestinal surgical patients in the form of a randomized controlled trial. Participants will be divided in 2 groups, a music group and a control group, where the music group will receive music interventions perioperatively. The researchers will compare both groups to see if there is a difference in sleep quality.

NCT ID: NCT06117007 Recruiting - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Effects of Betalains on Cardiovascular Health and Quality of Life

Start date: October 30, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over trial is to investigate the effects of beetroot-derived betalains on cardiovascular health, sleep and quality of life in healthy middle-aged individuals. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - Do betalains improve vascular function? - Do betalains improve sleep? - Do betalains improve quality of life? Participants will be involved with the following: - Consuming a daily betalain-rich or placebo capsule for a month - Non-invasive cardiovascular measurements - Wearing a fitness tracker for tracking physical activity and sleep - Answering questionnaires regarding quality of life Researchers will compare results between the intervention versus the placebo group to see if any of the study outcomes are significantly different.

NCT ID: NCT06105307 Not yet recruiting - Fatigue Clinical Trials

Using Cognitive-Behavioral Change and Mobile Technology to Improve RN Sleep and Fatigue

RN-SLEEP
Start date: February 20, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The U.S. registered nurse (RN) workforce is the largest in the Healthcare and Social Assistance Sector and is at high risk for injuries and errors due to poor sleep and fatigue. Shift work (i.e., nights, evenings, rotating shifts) can contribute to RNs not obtaining adequate, restful sleep. Work intensity, including heavy physical and emotional workloads of caring for critically ill patients, can contribute to job stress, resulting in spill-over effects at home when RNs experience difficulties falling and staying asleep. To address work and home sleep barriers, this project proposes the development and pilot testing of RN-SLEEP, a skill-building mobile application designed to improve sleep. RN-SLEEP will provide a convenient, flexible space to learn sleep-enhancing evidence-based shift work-specific strategies, and cognitive-behavioral methods, (e.g., goal setting, relaxation training). Using NIOSH's Research 2 Practice (R2P) approach, the study team will collaborate with participants (N=18-24) from an RN union to refine RN-SLEEP content, integrating current sleep literature (including National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health [NIOSH] material) with cognitive-behavioral based training. RN-SLEEP will be pilot-tested using a two-group pretest-posttest study design, comparing sleep outcome measures (duration, quality) of RN-SLEEP participant users (n=38) with participants from an education control group (n=38). Data trends on fatigue, what drives behavior change (beliefs and self-efficacy), and other sleep outcome measures (timing, regularity, efficiency, daytime sleepiness) will be explored. RN-SLEEP goals align with Healthy People 2030, NIOSH's strategic goal to promote safe and healthy work design and well-being through two NIOSH Healthcare and Social Assistance Sector/Healthy Work Design Cross-Sector (HCSA/HWD) intermediate goals. HWD goal 7.2A is to conduct intervention research addressing fatigue (poor sleep sequela) due to suboptimal work designs (shift work) in the healthcare industry. HCSA/HWD goal 7.12A prioritizes interventions designed to impact work and non-work contributors to safety and health. This RN-SLEEP intervention aims to improve sleep by building skills that help RNs overcome obstacles to sleep from work and home, thus improving health and safety. Immediate outputs include a mobile app, designed and tested in collaboration with RNs, to improve sleep. Study results will be disseminated through our union collaborators, nursing conferences and journal publications, and our University's NIOSH-sponsored Education and Research Center social media outlets. Intermediate outcomes include enhancing RN sleep through training rarely available in nursing schools and traditional hospital health and safety training programs. Improving sleep can reduce fatigue and may decrease occupational injuries and errors. RN-SLEEP is adaptable, where future versions could be modified to meet the needs of other HCSA workers (i.e., nursing aides) and workers in other industries (e.g., oil and gas) scheduled to work non-standard work hours. End outcomes include integrating RN-SLEEP into a broader hospital organization intervention to mitigate fatigue risks.

NCT ID: NCT06102460 Enrolling by invitation - Sleep Clinical Trials

Pre-sleep Macros on Sleep Quality and Recovery

Start date: January 23, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the effect of eating before bed (2 hours after dinner, 30mins before bed) and the effects this has on sleep and recovery measures in elite female athletes. Participants will be randomized to 4 possible groups in a double-blind randomized cross over design. Each group will ingest 40 grams of one of the following nutrients as a liquid shake for 3 consecutive nights: 1. Casein Protein 2. a-lactalbumin Protein 3. Carbohydrate 4. Placebo There will be at least 1 week washout period between each intervention. Sleep and recovery outcome measures will be obtained through a WHOOP 4.0 wearable healthy tracking device. Subjective sleep and recovery will be obtained through subjective questionnaires. Food will be logged by participants on intervention days. Blood glucose will be measured using continuous glucose monitors.

NCT ID: NCT06100159 Completed - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Short-term Effects of Ventilation Tubes in Children With Chronic Otitis Media With Effusion

Start date: January 20, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical, randomized trial is to compare the sleeping patterns and quality of life of children with chronic otitis media with effusion (OME) with or without tympanic tubes insertion. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does tympanic tube insertion have an effect on sleep quality in children with chronic OME? - Does tympanic tube insertion improve the quality of life for the children with chronic OME and their caregivers? Participants will have their movements during sleep and number of awakenings measured by an accelerometer placed on their wrist for 7 nights before and after tympanic tube insertion. Their caregivers will answer questionnaires regarding quality of life on behalf of the child. Researchers will compare with a control group of children who also is diagnosed with chronic OME. They will also have their sleep monitored for 7 nights and their caregivers will complete quality of life questionnaires, but the will not receive a tympanic tube. However the control group will be reassessed a month after baseline, and if they still qualify for tympanic tube insertion they will undergo the same routine as the intervention group.

NCT ID: NCT06097182 Recruiting - Sleep Clinical Trials

Postbiotic Intervention for Acute Stress Management

PIAS
Start date: October 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to evaluate the sub-chronic effects of colonic delivery of a postbiotic on stress response, mood state, sleep, and cognition in healthy young subjects with elevated self-reported stress levels. It is hypothesized that oral intake of the postbiotic, when released in the colonic intestinal site, leads to a blunted subjective and objective stress response after a stress induction.

NCT ID: NCT06094699 Recruiting - Sleep Clinical Trials

Improving Sleep in the Neurology In-Patient Population

I_SLEEP
Start date: April 30, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

We aim to test multiple interventions to improve sleep for Neurology inpatients, including 1) a sleep-friendly order set, and 2) a sleep menu. We will collect patient sleep data, including duration and quality, via actigraphy devices (FitBits). We will also conduct qualitative patient surveys to understand the impact of these interventions.

NCT ID: NCT06079853 Recruiting - Stress Clinical Trials

Nurse Suicide: Physiologic Sleep Health Promotion Trial

Start date: September 8, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to identify factors (sleep, psychiatric characteristics, stressful life events, and work environment characteristics) that potentiate or mitigate adverse effects of real-world stressors that predispose nurses to suicidal risk. The specific aims are: Aim 1. To investigate associations between sleep, stressful life events (life stressors, discrimination, lateral violence), psychiatric characteristics (psychiatric diagnosis, subjective mood), work environment characteristics (workload, shift type and duration, overtime, nurse work environment, and team relations) and stress (self-report and heart rate variability) in working nursing professionals while controlling for standard covariates known to influence stress. Aim 2. To determine if stress exposure (self-report and HRV) is associated with predisposing factors (sleep, stressful life events, additional psychiatric characteristics, and work environment characteristics), and to explore whether stress mediates the effect of predisposing factors on suicidal ideation in working nursing professionals. Exploratory Aim. To explore the preliminary impact of an existing sleep intervention (sleep health promotion kit) on self-reported stress, HRV, sleep, and psychiatric health outcomes including depression, burnout, and suicidal ideation.

NCT ID: NCT06060093 Completed - Sleep Clinical Trials

Effect of Ketone Ester Supplementation on Sleep and Recovery in Hypoxia

Start date: February 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study specifically aims to elucidate the effects of IEK on sleep and recuperation in hypoxia, after training in normoxia. These conditions are in line with the widely applied live-high train-low strategy. Moreover, blood and tissue oxygenation status, as well as cerebral blood flow and cognitive function will be assessed.