Center for Circadian Biology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Health and Behavioral Sciences Department, Naval Health Research Center, San Diego, CA 92106, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Mar 6;19(5):3093. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19053093.
Service members face unique barriers to sufficient and high quality sleep. In the present study, a circadian, light, and sleep skills program for shipboard military personnel (CLASS-SM) was designed to encourage and inform strategies that support optimal sleep and circadian health in the context of those barriers. Phase 1 included program development and refinement via an iterative formative evaluation, including structured interviews with service members and feedback from veterans and experts, resulting in further tailoring to the population. In Phase 2, the highly tailored program was administered to shipboard personnel (n = 55), and acceptability indicators were measured. Sleep- and circadian-related knowledge (pre- and post-program) and the perceived relevance of, and satisfaction with, program content (post-program) were assessed. Before the intervention, most individuals were unaware that 7−9 h of sleep is recommended (72%) and had little understanding of the physiological effects of light; however, knowledge scores increased significantly post-program, from 51% to 88% correct (p < 0.0001). Reception was positive, with high reported satisfaction and relevance. Most individuals reported that they learned something new (89%), planned to use one or more learned strategies (100%), and intended to share learned information with others (85%); the physiological effects of light and circadian rhythms were the content areas most frequently reported as new and useful. The results demonstrate the need for, and feasibility of, the delivery of this program in operational environments.
军人在获得充足和高质量睡眠方面面临着独特的障碍。在本研究中,设计了一种针对舰上军事人员的昼夜节律、光线和睡眠技巧方案(CLASS-SM),以鼓励和提供支持这些障碍下最佳睡眠和昼夜节律健康的策略。第一阶段包括通过迭代形成性评估来开发和完善方案,包括与军人进行结构化访谈以及退伍军人和专家的反馈,从而进一步针对该人群进行定制。在第二阶段,对舰上人员(n=55)实施了高度定制的方案,并测量了可接受性指标。评估了与睡眠和昼夜节律相关的知识(方案前后)以及对方案内容的感知相关性和满意度(方案后)。在干预之前,大多数人不知道推荐 7-9 小时的睡眠(72%),并且对光的生理影响了解甚少;但是,知识得分在方案后显著增加,从 51%提高到 88%(p<0.0001)。结果表明,这种方案在作战环境中是有必要的,也是可行的。反应积极,满意度和相关性报告很高。大多数人表示他们学到了新的东西(89%),计划使用一种或多种学到的策略(100%),并打算与他人分享所学信息(85%);光和昼夜节律的生理效应是最常被报告为新的和有用的内容领域。