Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of conducting a future randomized control trial that will compare the efficacy of sleep behavioral interventions in a high-risk community including adapted sleep hygiene and yoga. The investigators will conduct a 40 person 12-week randomized control trial (RCT) in low-income housing population where half the participants will receive a community adapted sleep hygiene intervention (SH) and half will receive a community adapted sleep hygiene intervention and a yoga intervention. The investigators will evaluate the feasibility of recruiting from our target community, randomizing individuals to interventions delivered in community rooms with home-based practices, and delivering the targeted interventions with high adherence and fidelity.


Clinical Trial Description

Inadequate sleep is highly prevalent in low-socioeconomic status (SES) and minority groups and associated with multiple health problems. The root causes of inadequate sleep are often related to behavioral practices and stress, both of which may be favorably impacted using socio-contextually appropriate sleep hygiene recommendations and mind-body practices such as yoga. A preliminary RCT that will address the role of sleep behavioral interventions in a high-risk community will be conducted. This evidence is needed to guide mind-body therapies in low-SES communities in which such strategies are under-utilized to improve health.

The investigators have assembled a multidisciplinary team of experts in sleep medicine, complementary and integrative health, behavioral medicine, community engagement, social epidemiology, and clinical trials to conduct a planning study to adapt behavioral sleep interventions for residents in urban low-income housing and to evaluate their uptake and fidelity. The investigators have conducted qualitative formative evaluation work and conducted modified SH and Yoga pilot studies. In this phase, the investigators will deliver a 12-week trial testing the feasibility of (1) an adapted sleep hygiene intervention (SH) and (2) yoga + adapted sleep hygiene intervention SH+Y):

A. A Sleep Hygiene (SH) Intervention, addressing: beliefs and attitudes towards sleep; challenges for adhering to sleep hygiene recommendations given chaotic family routines, work schedules and bedroom conditions; strategies for overcoming barriers, and prioritization of recommendations most likely to be efficacious.

B. A Yoga (Y) Intervention: intervention intensity/duration and class format; tailored home-based recommendations for bedtime practice combining meditation, breathing and postures; tools to assess and enhance adherence; race/ethnicity concordance of the instructor and student; and use of peer yoga assistants.

The investigators aim to conduct a 40 person 12-week RCT of SH vs SH+Y to inform the design of a future large-scale RCT. The investigators will evaluate the feasibility of recruiting from our target community, randomizing individuals to interventions delivered in community rooms with home-based practices, and delivering the targeted interventions with high adherence and fidelity. The following will be evaluated:

- Reach of the target population: The number of potentially eligible individuals approached to participate will be tracked as well as the characteristics of individuals who do and do not choose to participate, and differences will be assessed. Reasons for choosing not to participate will be assessed using open ended questions (e.g., burden, perception of yoga, needs, etc.).

- Adoption and adherence: the proportion of individuals that sustain participation throughout the intervention will be assessed, and quantify attendance at classes and home-practices through logs and interim phone interviews. The investigators will describe patterns of dropout rates and adherence to the interventions by key demographic factors and by moderating and mediating factors.

- Implementation-consistency of delivery of the intervention: a checklist of core intervention elements will be used to document the degree to which core elements of the intervention was delivered as specified in the protocol.

The investigators will also assess the feasibility of collecting a range of baseline, outcome, process and mediator data and to generate data to support use of specific measures in a later trial, including patterns of missingness of data, distributions of data, correlations between outcomes, baseline factors and mediators, and evaluation of "dose-response" associations between time in intervention and sleep duration and efficiency.

Power analysis (sample size, evaluable subjects, etc.): The study is designed for feasibility and not powered to test the intervention effect. The SH+Y intervention will be considered as potentially efficacious if the estimates for the change scores (post-pre within and between group changes and their 95% confidence intervals) are consistent with clinically significant improvements in sleep duration (actigraphy sleep increases by > 30 minutes), sleep quality improves by > 0.3 standard deviations), or sleep hygiene (reduction in deviation in wake time relative to recommended wake time > 25%). The investigators will consider inclusion of specific measurements (mediators) in a future RCT based on: <10% missingness; correlation of change score or baseline score with outcomes of >.20; absence of redundancy with a simpler metric (r<.80). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03392194
Study type Interventional
Source Brigham and Women's Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 10, 2018
Completion date July 12, 2018

See also
  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 NCT05102565 - A Dyadic Telehealth Program for Alzheimer's Patients/Caregivers N/A
Completed NCT05576844 - Ai Youmian (Love Better Sleep) for People Living With HIV 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