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Active clinical trials for "Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders"

Results 201-210 of 1052

Digital Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (dCBT-I) for Maternal Insomnia

Digital Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (dCBT-I)

Insomnia symptoms are common during pregnancy, especially in the second and third trimesters, which can reach more than 68%. Insomnia during pregnancy is not only associated with increased risk of preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, preterm labor, and cesarean section, but also increased postpartum poor sleep and postpartum depression. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-I) and drug therapy for insomnia are the two main methods of insomnia treatment. Drug therapy is the more commonly used traditional treatment method, but there may be certain drug risks. Therefore, non-drug methods for Insomnia in pregnant women is much safer. Cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia is a psychological therapy for insomnia. Compared with sedative-hypnotic drugs, its therapeutic effect is slow, but the curative effect is long-lasting, with less relapse after treatment and no invasive side effects. Multiple guidelines recommend it as first-line therapy for insomnia. And "Digital Cognitive Behavioral Therapy" (dCBT-I), is based on CBT-I, a therapy provided by the Internet and smartphones, which simulates face-to-face CBT-I in reality. It can provide more convenient medical services for the special group of pregnant women, improve sleep, improve mental symptoms, life treatment, and reduce the risk of adverse outcomes for mothers and children. The Womens' Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine is conducting a clinical study on "Digital Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (dCBT-I) for maternal Insomnia during pregnancy". The primary goal of this research project was to examine the efficacy of dCBT-I ("RuMian") in the treatment of maternal insomnia. "RuMian" is a fully automatic dCBT-I application developed in China, and subjects will use it for free.

Not yet recruiting18 enrollment criteria

The Prevalence of Insomnia in Patients With Psychiatric Disorders

Insomnia

The primary aim of the proposed project is to investigate the prevalence of insomnia in patients with psychiatric disorders treated as inpatients in psychiatric hospitals in two study sites in Switzerland and nine study sites in Germany. The secondary aim is to investigate whether there are demographic or disorder specific parameters that influence the prevalence of insomnia in patients with psychiatric disorders.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy for Insomnia in the Treatment of Pathological Gambling

Gambling Disorder Treatment

Gambling is a public health risk. The wide panel of games available (poker, sport bets, scratch card games, slot machines, stock speculation …) and the advent of the Internet means that this behaviour is increasingly monitored on an epidemiological level, to the point where its pathological practice is now recognized in the DSM-5. Indeed, the scientific literature suggests a bidirectional link between use disorders and sleep disorders. Sleep deprivation is known to lead to impaired judgment (risk-taking), increased sensitivity to reward, attentional difficulties and poor emotional management. The reverse has also been demonstrated: for example, playing at night has an impact on sleep quality, particularly in terms of difficulty falling asleep, ruminations about the game and a delay in the sleep-wake phase. Sleep disorders also affect patients undergoing withdrawal and/or cessation of a substance or behavior. This established link between addictions and circadian rhythms is important, since it is suggested that patients who are more impaired in both respects are more likely to relapse and respond less well to treatment. In addictology, Behavioral and Cognitive Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) has proved effective in alcohol-dependent subjects in four studies. All reported a better quality of life (less depressive cognitions, better lifestyle) after CBT-I, although only one study reported a numerical reduction in consumption.The treatment of substance use disorders (AUD) remains limited : no pharmacological treatment has proved its worth, and the reference treatment remains mainly CBT. Despite the indisputable effectiveness of CBT, between 14% and 50% of patients are reported to have broken off from follow-up and care, and almost 90% of patients end up relapsing.

Not yet recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Assessment of Light Therapy in Insomnia Disorder

Insomnia

Sleep disorders represent a major public health issue and the leader in these disorders is insomnia with 10 to 15% of subjects in the general population reporting symptoms of insomnia with a daytime impact. In addition to being very common, insomnia leads to an increase in morbidity and mortality and weighs on healthcare systems worldwide. Despite this public health context, insomnia is underdiagnosed and rarely treated. Hypnotics have proven efficacy but with a risk of dependence and pharmacotolerance which appears within a few weeks. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has a good level of evidence and is now a benchmark treatment for the management of insomnia. Unfortunately, not all patients adhere to or respond to these procedures, which cannot be implemented for many of them either. There is therefore a need to identify other alternative therapeutic strategies, and we believe that exposure to light is a promising treatment. In this perspective, it seems interesting to assess the effect of the propensity to fall asleep with an exposure to light therapy in patients suffering from insomnia. In order to be in optimal ecological conditions, we want to use a portable light therapy device which allows easy, acceptable and ambulatory exposure. If the lighttherapy is confirmed in insomnia under ecological conditions, this would make it possible to propose a new non-drug treatment, easy to access and on a large scale

Not yet recruiting25 enrollment criteria

Effectiveness of Digital Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia in Frontline Health Care Workers...

InsomniaPost Traumatic Stress Disorder2 more

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in increased workload and concerns about personal and family safety for frontline healthcare workers (HCWs), which can lead to decreased well-being and worsening mental health. Sleep disruption is particularly prevalent among HCWs providing frontline COVID-19 care. It can have direct consequences on their cognitive and emotional functioning, as well as on patient safety. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia (CBTi) is a first-line treatment for insomnia. It has been shown to improve sleep health and wellbeing in the general population. However, there are significant barriers to delivering CBTi to frontline HCWs, including limited availability of trained sleep therapists and high costs. To address this, a Canada-wide randomized controlled trial is developed to determine the effectiveness of a digital CBTi program on the sleep health, mental health, wellness, and overall quality of life of frontline HCWs caring for COVID-19 patients. This study may provide an easily accessible and scalable sleep health intervention that can be included as part of a national and global response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Not yet recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Digital Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia for Chronic Insomnia in Breast Cancer Survivors...

Chronic Insomnia

To explore the efficacy of dCBT-I therapy for chronic insomnia among breast cancer survivors in China, we propose to conduct a randomized, parallel controlled clinical study in breast cancer survivors using a smartphone Chinese application (app) "resleep". Breast cancer survivors with chronic insomnia were recruited from our Breast Disease Center and externally, with the waiting group as a parallel control and the dCBT-I treatment group as an intervention group, in a 1:1 sample size. Intervention group (dCBT-I treatment group) will receive full self-help dCBT-I administered by smartphone APP for 6 weeks. The control group (waiting for treatment group) will not receive any additional interventions based on the original conventional treatment and will be followed up as planned, waiting for treatment.At the end of the 3-month follow-up, the decision to receive treatment was made according to the patient's wishes. The primary endpoint was the insomnia severity index (ISI) at the end of treatment and at 3 months of treatment.

Not yet recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Heart Rate Variability Biofeedback as Adjunctive Therapy to Self-help CBT-I

Insomnia

This study will examine the effect of Heart Rate Variability (HRV) biofeedback as adjunctive therapy to self-help Cognitive Behavioral Therapy on insomnia (CBT-I) in Chinese adult population. Heart Rate Variability Biofeedback is a therapy training aiming at increasing heart rate oscillations through real-time feedback and slow breathing training. Several literature has found that HRV biofeedback training is effective in improving HRV and improving sleep quality and sleep efficiency (Gevirtz, 2013; Lin et al., 2019). On the other hand, self-help CBT-I is well-studied in efficacy of improving cognition and behaviors and relieving insomnia (Ho et al., 2014). Rare research study HRV biofeedback as adjunctive therapy to self-help CBT-I (Lehrer, 2017). In the light of this, this study will compare the efficacy of combination of both treatments with that of CBT-I alone, examining whether HRV biofeedback's focus on psychophysiological domain can help self-help CBT-I in more significantly improving HRV and sleep quality.

Not yet recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Insomnia Treatment and EMA (Ecological Momentary Assessment) Outcomes

Insomnia

The goal of this study is to examine the impact of suvorexant, an FDA-approved insomnia medication, on daytime symptoms (as measured by the Daytime Insomnia Symptoms Scale: cognition, positive mood, negative mood, and fatigue/sleepiness) among older adults with insomnia. The primary hypothesis is that relative to placebo, suvorexant will improve sleep and daytime symptoms. The word "placebo" refers to a harmless pill with no therapeutic effect.

Not yet recruiting15 enrollment criteria

A Novel Wearable Device for the Treatment of Insomnia

Insomnia

The purpose of the study is to help determine if a wearable sleep wellness device improves sleep among adults with insomnia. We will enroll a total of 60 participants for this remotly conducted study and randomize 1:1 for treatment and control. Aim 1 of the study is to test the effects of the sleep wellness device compared to a placebo device on sleep after 28 days of use. Aim 2 of the study is to test the longer term effects of the sleep wellness device at 3 month follow-up.

Not yet recruiting16 enrollment criteria

The Sleepio After Cancer Study

InsomniaCancer

This study will recruit women over the age of 18 with a current or prior cancer diagnosis who have clinical insomnia. This study will examine the efficacy of digital cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (dCBT-I) compared to sleep hygiene education.

Not yet recruiting15 enrollment criteria
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