Sleep Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effects of a Parental Intervention on Electronic Media Exposure and Sleep Patterns in Adolescents
Amongst adolescents, there is a gap that widens with age between recommended sleep duration
and actual sleep time. Due to this gap, bodily and mental functions such as those related to
the metabolic and immune systems, performance, memory, school achievement and creative
ability can be harmed. Moreover, lack of sleep involves an increased risk of accidents and
injuries, behavior problems and reduced quality of life.
Biological factors that explain changes in sleep patterns include delays in the circadian
timing system and in the homeostatic system that regulate sleep and wakefulness. These
changes cause a growing and continuous delay in sleep phase during adolescence. In addition,
a number of environmental factors affect sleep patterns: variables such as early school
start time, increased homework assignments, after-school activities, lack of parental demand
for adequate sleep hours, and increased "screen time," or use of electronic media, including
television, computer games, internet and cellular phones.
Based on the Parental Style model, the authoritative parenting style is characterized by
parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand and displaying high levels of
responsiveness to their children on the other. The authoritarian parenting style is
characterized by parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand yet
displaying low levels of responsiveness to their children on the other. The permissive
parenting style is characterized by parents setting low demands on their children and
displaying high levels of responsiveness to their children. In several investigations, the
authoritative parenting style has been shown to have a positive influence on child
development, academic achievement and psychosocial competency, and promoted healthy
behaviors in adolescents, such as good eating habits, increased physical activity and a
decrease in risky behaviors such as smoking, alcohol abuse, extreme diets and early sexual
behavior.
The Conceptual Model views parents as the sole agents of change in their children's life,
and focuses on the power of personal example, environmental changes and promotion of the
authoritative parental style. The main aim of this research is to evaluate the effectiveness
of an intervention program that deals with increasing parents' awareness of the changes that
characterize adolescents and encourages the authoritative parental style based on the
Parenting Style Model.
Amongst adolescents, there is a gap that widens with age between recommended sleep duration
and actual sleep time. Due to this gap, bodily and mental functions such as those related to
the metabolic and immune systems, performance, memory, school achievement and creative
ability can be harmed. Moreover, lack of sleep involves an increased risk of accidents and
injuries, behavior problems and reduced quality of life.
Biological factors that explain changes in sleep patterns include delays in the circadian
timing system and in the homeostatic system that regulate sleep and wakefulness. These
changes cause a growing and continuous delay in sleep phase during adolescence. In addition,
a number of environmental factors affect sleep patterns: variables such as early school
start time, increased homework assignments, after-school activities, lack of parental demand
for adequate sleep hours, and increased "screen time," or use of electronic media, including
television, computer games, internet and cellular phones.
Based on the Parental Style model, the authoritative parenting style is characterized by
parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand and displaying high levels of
responsiveness to their children on the other. The authoritarian parenting style is
characterized by parents setting high demands on their children on the one hand yet
displaying low levels of responsiveness to their children on the other. The permissive
parenting style is characterized by parents setting low demands on their children and
displaying high levels of responsiveness to their children. In several investigations, the
authoritative parenting style has been shown to have a positive influence on child
development, academic achievement and psychosocial competency, and promoted healthy
behaviors in adolescents, such as good eating habits, increased physical activity and a
decrease in risky behaviors such as smoking, alcohol abuse, extreme diets and early sexual
behavior.
The Conceptual Model views parents as the sole agents of change in their children's life,
and focuses on the power of personal example, environmental changes and promotion of the
authoritative parental style. This model has been found to be effective in the field of
eating disorders but has never been implemented in the field of sleep.
The main aim of this research is to evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention program
that deals with increasing parents' awareness of the changes that characterize adolescents
and encourages the authoritative parental style based on the Parenting Style Model; it also
encourages parents to make environmental changes at home based on the Conceptual Model in
order to promote healthy behaviors including healthy sleep patterns and controlled exposure
to electronic media in young normative adolescents (ages 10-12) .
Research Hypotheses:
Hypothesis 1: There is a link between availability and the amount of time spent using
electronic media. Adolescents who have media devices in their rooms are exposed for longer
hours to electronic media compared to those who do not have media devices in their rooms. In
addition, there is a link between the availability of the media devices and sleep patterns.
Adolescents who have media devices in their rooms will show delayed sleep patterns and
shorter sleep durations compared to those who do not.
Hypothesis 2: There is a connection between parental style, sleep patterns and media
exposure habits in young adolescents. Children of parents with an authoritative style would
exhibit proper sleep patterns and exposure to electronic media; and children whose parents
have an authoritarian parental style would have longer sleep durations and less exposure to
electronic media compared with other parenting styles. It was assumed that children whose
parents exhibit the permissive parental style would have shorter sleep duration and more
exposure to electronic media compared to other parenting styles.
Hypothesis 3: There is a connection between sleep patterns, media exposure habits and
quality of life in young adolescents. The study will find that better sleep patterns and
lower exposure to electronic media are related to higher quality of life in young
adolescents.
Hypothesis 4: The intervention program based on the Conceptual Model will lead to an
increase in parents' knowledge about the changes that characterize adolescents and will
promote the authoritative parental style.
Hypothesis 5: The intervention program will lead to an improvement in healthy behaviors,
including better sleep patterns, controlled use of electronic media, better quality of life
of young adolescents.
Method The sample included 70 dyads of parents (mostly mothers) and adolescents from schools
in the Jezreel Valley. The experimental group and the control group each consisted of 35
participants (35 girls) of average age 10.7 (0.9) years. There were three sessions of data
collection: 1. baseline, 2. immediately following intervention, 3. three months
post-intervention. Parents and adolescents reported on electronic media consumption, sleep
patterns and quality of life. In addition, parents reported on their parenting styles and
adolescents wore an ActiGraph (for monitoring their sleep patterns) and filled in a sleep
diary for five days. Parents in the experimental group participated in six workshops, while
parents in the control group received information regarding healthy sleep habits and the
effects of excessive media exposure by mail and were expected to read it on their own.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed |
NCT04044495 -
Sleep, Rhythms and Risk of Alzheimer's Disease
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT06079853 -
Nurse Suicide: Physiologic Sleep Health Promotion Trial
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT05017974 -
Research on Improving Sleep During Pregnancy
|
N/A | |
| Recruiting |
NCT05206747 -
Ottawa Sunglasses at Night for Mania Study
|
N/A | |
| Enrolling by invitation |
NCT04253054 -
Chinese Multi-provincial Cohort Study-Beijing Project
|
||
| Completed |
NCT04513743 -
Ultra Long-Term Sleep Monitoring Using UNEEG™ Medical 24/7 EEG™ SubQ
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03251274 -
Bath Machine on Sleep Quality in Nursing Home
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04102345 -
Lavender vs Zolpidem Sleep Quality During Diagnostic PSG
|
Early Phase 1 | |
| Completed |
NCT03725943 -
Comparison of Dreem to Clinical PSG for Sleep Monitoring in Healthy Adults
|
N/A | |
| Active, not recruiting |
NCT05062161 -
Sleep Duration and Blood Pressure During Sleep
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04562181 -
Consistency Evaluation of the qCON, qNOX Indices and Bispectral Index
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT05576844 -
Ai Youmian (Love Better Sleep) for People Living With HIV
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT05102565 -
A Dyadic Telehealth Program for Alzheimer's Patients/Caregivers
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04688099 -
Synovial Fluid Sleep Study
|
||
| Recruiting |
NCT04171245 -
Prescribing Laughter for Sleep and Wellbeing in UAE University Students
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03758768 -
The Effects of a Blue Monochromatic Light Intervention on Evening-type Individuals' Sleep and Circadian Rhythms
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT03163498 -
Evaluation of Sleep Pattern and Mood Profile in Hypertensive Patients
|
||
| Completed |
NCT04093271 -
Investigating the Efficacy of Rest-ZZZ Formula in Healthy Participants With Difficulty Falling Asleep or Staying a Sleep
|
Phase 1 | |
| Completed |
NCT03673397 -
The Acute Effect of Aerobic Exercise on Sleep in Patients With Depression
|
N/A | |
| Completed |
NCT04120363 -
Trial of Testosterone Undecanoate for Optimizing Performance During Military Operations
|
Phase 4 |