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Improving Memory for Sleep Treatment Content With Text Messages

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Sleep Wake Disorders
Interventions
Behavioral: TranS-C
Other: PUSH text messages
Other: PULL text messages
Behavioral: PE
Registration Number
NCT02961400
Lead Sponsor
University of California, Berkeley
Brief Summary

A drop off in improvement over the months and years after treatment is common. One contributor may be poor memory for the contents of treatment. This study seeks to determine whether text messages containing reminders of the content of sessions will improve treatment outcomes.

Detailed Description

The growth in the use of technology provides an opportunity to send reminders to participants via text messages. The early studies on text messaging interventions indicate this approach is enjoyable for participants and has positive effects across a range of domains and treatment types. Hence, this study will test whether text messages containing reminders of the content of sessions will improve treatment outcomes. Two text messaging methods will also be tested. One is to send text messages to remind participants of their goals (PUSH condition) and the second is to send text messages to remind participants to recall their goals (PULL condition). This study will be conducted within the context of an NICHD-funded Randomized Controlled Trial (grant number R01-HD071065; protocol registration ID NCT01828320). In R01-HD071065 adolescents ages 10-18 (n = 176) will receive either the Transdiagnostic Sleep and Circadian Intervention (TranS-C) or a Psychoeducation (PE). At the 6-month follow-up assessment for R01-HD071065, participants will be randomized using 3 (PUSH text messages, PULL text messages, or no text messages) x 2 (TranS-C or PE) design. At the 6-month follow-up assessment, a questionnaire will also be administered to establish baseline memory for treatment. Participants will be sent text messages once per week until they return for the 12 month follow-up assessment for R01-HD071065. At the 12 month follow-up assessment, participants will be asked to complete the same memory for treatment questionnaire completed at the 6 month follow-up assessment as well as a questionnaire evaluating the acceptability of the text message reminders. This research is a first step toward identifying whether an inexpensive and ubiquitous technology (i.e., text messaging) can improve memory for treatment.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
176
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Scoring within the lowest quartile of the Children's Morningness-Eveningness Preferences Scale (CMEP; 27 or lower) and a 7-day sleep diary showing a sleep onset time of of 10:40 pm or later for 10-13 year olds, 11 pm or later for 14-16 year olds, and 11:20 pm or later for 17-18 year olds at least 3 nights per week. Must have had the current pattern of late bedtimes for the last 3 months.
  2. 'At risk' in one of the five health domains: emotional, behavioral, social, physical, and cognitive. Emotional risk will be operationalized as a score of 4 or above on any of the following items on the Child Depression Rating Scale: Difficulty Having Fun, Social Withdrawal, Irritability, Depressed Feelings, Excessive Weeping, or a T-score of 61 or above on the Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC), based on age group (10-11 years, 12-15 year, 16-19 years) using the MASC-10 Profile. Behavioral risk will be operationalized as a Sensation Seeking Scale score greater than 3.93 for males ages 10-13, greater than 3.19 for females 10-13, greater than 4.07 for males 14-18, or greater than 3.19 for females 14-18; taking ADHD medication or Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School-Age Children (KSADs) diagnosis of ADHD; current alcohol or substance abuse; or past alcohol or substance dependence. Social and cognitive risk will be defined as "worse" than others the teen's age in one or more social behavior from Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) Section VI or failing one or more academic class from CBCL Section VII, respectively. Physical risk will be operationalized as a Physical Health Questionnaire-15 score of 4 or above, six or more days of school absences, or a BMI above the 85th percentile for the participant's sex and age.
  3. Age between 10 and 18 and living with a parent or guardian and and attending a class/job by 9am at least 3 days per week;
  4. English language fluency;
  5. Able and willing to give informed assent.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. An active, progressive physical illness (e.g., cancer, respiratory disorder) or neurological degenerative disease directly related to the onset and course of the sleep disturbance;
  2. Evidence from clinical diagnosis or report by youth or parent of sleep apnea, restless legs or periodic limb movements during sleep. Youth presenting with provisional diagnoses of any of these disorders (e.g., sleep apnea) will be referred for a non-study polysomnography (PSG) evaluation at the parent's discretion and will be enrolled only if the diagnosis is disconfirmed;
  3. Mental retardation, autism spectrum disorder, or other significantly impairing pervasive developmental disorder. Based on previous recruitment experiences in a youth depression study, it is expected that this exclusion will be invoked very infrequently (once every few years);
  4. Bipolar disorder or schizophrenia or another current Axis I disorder if there is a significant risk of harm and/or decompensation if treatment of that comorbid condition is delayed as a function of participating in any stage of this study. Otherwise, all other comorbid psychiatric conditions will be allowed to (i) to maximize representativeness and (ii) because a byproduct may be that the treatment constitutes a helpful 'transdiagnostic' treatment for youth across psychiatric disorders.
  5. A medication-free group may be difficult to recruit and would likely be unrepresentative. Hence, participants will not be excluded on the basis of stable use of medications (> 4 weeks). The exception was use of hypnotics and other medications known to alter sleep (e.g., melatonin).
  6. History of substance dependence in the past six months;
  7. Current suicide risk sufficient to preclude treatment on an outpatient basis.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
No text messagesPENo text messages will be sent in this condition to participants in either treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE).
PUSH text messagesPEParticipants will be sent text messages containing information relevant to their treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE).
No text messagesTranS-CNo text messages will be sent in this condition to participants in either treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE).
PUSH text messagesTranS-CParticipants will be sent text messages containing information relevant to their treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE).
PUSH text messagesPUSH text messagesParticipants will be sent text messages containing information relevant to their treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE).
PULL text messagesPULL text messagesParticipants will be sent text messages containing information relevant to their treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE). Text messages will request a response from the participant.
PULL text messagesTranS-CParticipants will be sent text messages containing information relevant to their treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE). Text messages will request a response from the participant.
PULL text messagesPEParticipants will be sent text messages containing information relevant to their treatment condition (i.e., TranS-C or PE). Text messages will request a response from the participant.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Total sleep time (TST) average on weeknights via Daily Sleep DiaryMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

12mo TST

Average bedtime on weeknights measured via Daily Sleep DiaryMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

12mo Avg Bedtime

Morning Eveningness preference measured via Childrens Morningness Eveningness Preference ScaleMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

12mo CME

Patient Recall of Session ContentsChange from 6-months post-treatment to 12-months post-treatment

6-12mo Change in Patient Recall

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Text Message EvaluationMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

Measure of the acceptability of receiving text messages

Sleepiness scaleMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

Embedded within the School Sleep Habits Survey

Discrepancy between weeknights and weekends for Total Sleep Time, Bedtime, and Waketime via Daily Sleep DiaryMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

12mo Weeknight-Weekend Differences

Pittsburgh Sleep Quality IndexMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

12mo PSQI

Child Behavior ChecklistMeasured at 12-months post-treatment

Parent measure

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of California, Berkeley

🇺🇸

Berkeley, California, United States

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