Mitchell Jonathan A, Morales Knashawn H, Williamson Ariel A, Huffnagle Nicholas, Eck Casey, Jawahar Abigail, Juste Lionola, Fiks Alexander G, Zemel Babette S, Dinges David F
Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
Sleep Adv. 2021 Apr 15;2(1):zpab006. doi: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpab006. eCollection 2021.
Pediatricians lack tools to support families at home for the promotion of childhood sleep. We are using the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) framework to guide the development of a mobile health platform for childhood sleep promotion. The objective of this study is to demonstrate feasibility of a mobile health platform towards treating children with insufficient sleep.
Children aged 10-12 years were enrolled (Study #1: = 30; Study #2: = 43). Participants wore a sleep tracker to measure sleep duration. Data were retrieved by a mobile health platform, programmed to send introductory messages during run-in (2 weeks) and goal achievement messages during intervention (7 weeks) periods. In study #1, participants were randomized to control, gain-framed incentive or loss-framed incentive arms. In study #2, participants were randomized to control, loss-framed incentive, normative feedback or loss-framed incentive plus normative feedback arms.
In study #1, 1514 nights of data were captured (69%) and sleep duration during the intervention was higher by an average of 21 (95% CI: -8, 51) and 34 (95% CI: 7, 61) minutes per night for the gain-framed and loss-framed arms, respectively, compared to controls. In study #2, 2,689 nights of data were captured (81%), with no major differences in average sleep duration between the control and the loss-framed or normative feedback arms.
We have developed and deployed a mobile health platform that can capture sleep data and remotely communicate with families. Promising candidate intervention components will be further investigated under the of the MOST framework.
Both studies included in this manuscript were registered at clinicaltrials.gov:-Study #1: NCT03263338-Study #2: NCT03426644.
儿科医生缺乏在家中支持家庭促进儿童睡眠的工具。我们正在使用多阶段优化策略(MOST)框架来指导一个促进儿童睡眠的移动健康平台的开发。本研究的目的是证明一个移动健康平台对治疗睡眠不足儿童的可行性。
招募了10至12岁的儿童(研究1:n = 30;研究2:n = 43)。参与者佩戴睡眠追踪器以测量睡眠时间。数据由一个移动健康平台检索,该平台被编程为在磨合期(2周)发送介绍性信息,并在干预期(7周)发送目标达成信息。在研究1中,参与者被随机分配到对照组、获得框架激励组或损失框架激励组。在研究2中,参与者被随机分配到对照组、损失框架激励组、规范反馈组或损失框架激励加规范反馈组。
在研究1中,共采集了1514个夜晚的数据(69%),与对照组相比,获得框架激励组和损失框架激励组在干预期间的睡眠时间平均每晚分别增加21分钟(95%可信区间:-8,51)和34分钟(95%可信区间:7,61)。在研究2中,共采集了2689个夜晚的数据(81%),对照组与损失框架激励组或规范反馈组之间的平均睡眠时间无重大差异。
我们已经开发并部署了一个能够采集睡眠数据并与家庭进行远程通信的移动健康平台。有前景的候选干预组件将在MOST框架下进一步研究。
本手稿中包含的两项研究均已在clinicaltrials.gov上注册:-研究1:NCT03263338-研究2:NCT03426644。