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Sleep, the Never-ending Quest of College Students

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University of Houston

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sleep Disturbance
Sleep
Sleep Hygiene

Treatments

Behavioral: Behavior of Sleep Course

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04035213
STUDY00001775

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether undergraduate students completing a course focused entirely on sleep at a major urban university evidence positive changes in their sleep patterns compared to students completing a similar-level course (without any discussion of sleep) in the same department (Psychology) at the same university (UH). Potential changes in sleep patterns across the semester will be examined as well as whether putative changes in sleep can be linked with academic and mental health outcomes.

Full description

Aim 1) To evaluate whether a semester long course focused entirely on sleep produces improvements in college students' sleep patterns across the semester based on one-week sleep diaries.

H1: Compared to students enrolled in other courses who are not expected to show significant changes in sleep patterns, students enrolled in the sleep course will demonstrate increases in total sleep time, decreases in sleep onset latency, and decreases in nighttime awakenings. In line with Mayer's theoretical model, these sleep-based changes will evidence non-linear (i.e., quadractic) patterns across four time points during the semester.

Aim 2) To evaluate changes in sleep hygiene behaviors across the semester among students enrolled in a sleep course compared to students enrolled in other courses.

H2: Compared to students enrolled in other courses who are not expected to show significant changes in sleep hygiene behaviors, students enrolled in the sleep course will report a decreased frequency of naps, use of electronics within one hour of bed, and an increase in sleep regularity (e.g., reduction in the discrepancy between weekend and weekday wake times) across the four time points during the semester.

Aim 3) To evaluate how sleep patterns relate to daytime mood and energy levels across the semester among students enrolled in a sleep course and other courses.

H3: Greater total sleep time, shorter sleep onset latency, fewer nighttime awakenings, a less discrepancy between weekend and weekday wake times will predict higher energy levels and mood among both groups across the semester.

Aim 4) To evaluate how sleep patterns across the semester predict final course grades among students enrolled in a sleep course.

H4: Students enrolled in the sleep course who demonstrate increases in total sleep time, decreases in sleep onset latency, and decreases in nighttime awakenings across the semester will achieve higher final course grades than students who demonstrate minimal to no improvements in sleep.

Enrollment

146 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All undergraduate students at UH age 18 and older who are enrolled in the following upper-level courses and who provide consent to participate will be eligible to participate as control participants

Exclusion criteria

  • Previous enrollment in PSYC 4397: The Behavior of Sleep course or a similar course.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

146 participants in 2 patient groups

Behavior of Sleep Course
Experimental group
Description:
A semester-long course focused on sleep improves college students' sleep patterns over one semester. The listed aims of this course are to: 1) provide students with a comprehensive understanding of sleep; 2) afford an overview of the multiple ways sleep impact health, performance and well-being; and 3) to assist students in discovering how their own sleep-wake patterns impact their day to day functioning.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Behavior of Sleep Course
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Students from other upper level departmental courses with content that does not include a focus on or discussion of sleep

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Simon Lau, M.A.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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