Chronic Insomnia Clinical Trial
Official title:
REST: Restoring Effective Sleep Tranquility in College Veterans With Service-Related Injuries
The purpose of the project is to improve the sleep quality and sleep duration of post 9/11 veterans seeking college degrees. Preliminary research findings within CSU's New Start for Student Veterans program indicate veterans with service-related injuries report difficulties with sleep quality and duration. The REST program will recruit 24 college veterans and engage them in a seven-week multi component sleep improvement program using evidence-based educational and behavioral change supports that are considered best practice for improving sleep quality. The investigators' scientific objectives in this application are to establish the efficacy of a group-based sleep education and sleep-skills intervention to improve sleep quality and duration, and to advance understanding of relationships between participants' sleep-related knowledge and behaviors associated with improved sleep quality and duration in veterans with service-related injuries in college. The investigators will initially engage 8 participants to establish treatment fidelity and participant satisfaction of the 7-week group intervention. This will be followed by engaging 16 additional participants in the 7-week group intervention, 8 will be randomly placed as wait-list controls and then receive the intervention. The 7-week group intervention will take place within the CSU Occupational Therapy Department, and all assessments will be completed using a web-based survey.
Design: The investigators will complete a mixed-methods prospective longitudinal study with
pre and post intervention testing (component A; N = 8), followed by a mixed-methods
wait-listed cross-over controlled trial with pre and post intervention testing (component B;
N = 16). Within component A participants will complete pre-intervention assessments,
complete 7-weeks of group intervention and weekly monitoring, and complete post-intervention
assessments and follow-up assessments 3 months later. Within component B, 8 participants
will be randomly assigned to the early intervention group and 8 participants will be
assigned to the wait-listed cross-over (or late) intervention group. Participants in the
early and late groups will complete pre-intervention assessments at the same time.
Participants in the early intervention group will then complete 7-weeks of group
intervention and weekly monitoring, and complete post-intervention assessments immediately
after the intervention and a follow-up assessment 3 months later. Participants in the late
intervention group will complete sleep diary information for 7 randomly-chosen nights, a
second pre-intervention assessment approximately 8-weeks following their initial
pre-intervention assessment, complete 7-weeks of group intervention and weekly monitoring,
and complete post-intervention assessments and follow-up assessments 3 months later. All
interventions will occur within the CSU Occupational Therapy Department, all pre and post
intervention assessments will be completed using a web-based survey.
Participants: Active recruitment of study participants will occur through email and
telephone contacts to veterans engaged in ongoing CSU IRB-approved studies in which they
have agreed to being contacted regarding participation in future studies occurring within
the Department of Occupational Therapy and the New Start for Student Veterans Program.
Participants will receive a gift card of their choice for completing post-intervention
assessments, whereas participants assigned to the late group of Component B will receive an
additional gift card for completing their second pre-intervention assessment. Participants
who complete the 7- week group intervention and first of two post-intervention assessments
will also be allowed to keep the Fitbit wearable actigraph they have used within the study.
Data Collection: The investigators will complete a comprehensive evaluation at each
assessment period. Data collected will address 2 aims. Aim 1 will assess the fidelity and
participant satisfaction of a group-delivered sleep education and sleep skills intervention
for veterans with service-related injuries who are in college. The working hypothesis is
that a group-delivered sleep education and sleep skills intervention will be safe,
demonstrate adequate treatment fidelity, and participant satisfaction. Aim 2 will assess the
efficacy of a group-delivered sleep education and sleep skills intervention for veterans
with service-related injuries who are in college in terms of key variables of interest. The
working hypothesis is that participation in a group-delivered sleep education and sleep
skills intervention will result in improvements in participants' sleep quality, sleep
duration, and mental health. Further, through the evaluation of program data including
participants' attendance, sleep-related knowledge and behaviors, program adherence, and
qualitative interview data we seek to understand the key processes and outcomes associated
with intervention efficacy. Please see the Outcome Measures section of this protocol
registration for name and purpose of outcomes.
Intervention: All post 9/11 veteran participants will complete a 7-week group sleep
education and sleep skills intervention within the Department of Occupational Therapy. The
investigators will deliver a sleep education and sleep skills group-based intervention based
upon established best-practices for improving sleep quality and sleep quantity associated
with insomnia, specifically targeted to student veterans with service-related injuries. All
components of the intervention will be delivered by registered and licensed occupational
therapists practicing within the New Start for Student Veterans Program and the Department
of Occupational Therapy, which serves college veterans with service-related injuries at CSU
and Front Range Community College. For the duration of the study two local physicians, board
certified in Sleep Medicine and Psychiatry respectively will be available for consultation
on sleep issues related to veterans. The 7-week group intervention was developed to improve
sleep quality and sleep quantity through sleep-related education and behavioral goal setting
addressing: sleep monitoring with actigraph and sleep log, sleep education, sleep hygiene
and development and maintenance of good sleep habits, stimulus control for sleep
preparation, and mindfulness/ yoga for sleep preparation and daily stress reduction.
Participants will also meet individually either in person or by telephone on a weekly basis
with a registered and licensed occupational therapist, experienced in working with student
veterans with service-related injuries, and knowledgeable of the sleep-related education
used within the intervention. Individualized meetings will be used to assure: 1)
understanding and adherence in the use of sleep monitoring actigraphy and sleep diaries, and
2) establishing and monitoring participants' individualized goals related to sleep skills
behaviors. Participants will also have access to an occupational therapist from CSU's
Assistive Technology and Resource Center, experienced in working with veterans with
service-related injuries, to support the use of Fitbit sleep actigraph and associated mobile
sleep applications to ensure understanding of Fitbit use, integration (sync) of Fitbit and
mobile application, and establishment of an anonymous web-based profile for monitoring
sleep-related data.
Data Analysis: For Aim 1, the investigators will assess the intervention fidelity and
participant satisfaction of a group delivered sleep education and sleep skills intervention,
the investigators will report proportions of educational content and behavioral goals
established, and proportions of participants who rate the interventions as enjoyable (1-4 on
Likert scale). Descriptive statistics will be used to examine means and variances of key
constructs of interest. Change in key variables over the 7-week intervention will be
inspected via individual growth charts. Attendance, attrition, and adverse events will be
reported as proportions. The investigators will use focus groups to formally evaluate the
program, and to elicit suggestions for program improvement. Importantly, participants will
be asked to describe changes that have occurred during the intervention and why they think
the sleep education and behavioral sleep goals helped improve sleep quality, sleep quantity
or other sleep-related variables, such as mindfulness, physical, mental, and social health
domains. Qualitative analytic software (e.g., Atlas TI) will be used to code segments of
qualitative data. The investigators will review the text and identify emergent themes and
use an iterative consensus building process to generate themes and codes for participants
and their spouses/ significant others. For Aim 2 quantitative data will be analyzed in two
ways. First, for constructs measured at pre and post intervention only, a repeated-measures
ANOVA will be conducted to determine if post-intervention scores differ significantly across
the early and delayed conditions. Second, for the sleep variables, which will be collected
on a daily basis during the intervention, a time-series approach will be used to examine
within person change in these constructs over time. This type of analysis models the effect
of an intervention on a meaningful outcome collected regularly over time - with measurements
before the implementation of the intervention, during the intervention, and ideally after
the intervention. Using time-series models, the effect of an intervention can be estimated
after adjusting for serial dependence and any other measured shifts (e.g., day of the week,
length of the day, mid-terms/finals, outside temperature), through the specification of
linear models that capture increases or decreases in the mean level or slope of the
time-series. Specifically, an Auto-regressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) model will
be used to examine intervention effects of the program for the identified outcomes.
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