Who benefits from adolescent sleep interventions? Moderators of treatment efficacy in a randomized controlled trial of a cognitive‐behavioral and mindfulness‐based group sleep intervention for at‐risk adolescents

Nov 23, 2017Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines

Which teens benefit most from group sleep programs using thinking skills and mindfulness?

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Abstract

Participants (n = 123) receiving the sleep intervention showed significant improvements in self-reported sleep quality compared to the active control group.

  • The sleep intervention had a notable effect on sleep quality for adolescents with moderate to high anxiety and depression symptoms before the intervention.
  • No significant improvement in sleep quality was observed for those with low anxiety and depression symptoms.
  • Gender did not influence the effectiveness of the sleep intervention on self-reported sleep outcomes.
  • Improvements in sleep onset latency and sleep efficiency were not linked to pre-intervention levels of sleep duration, anxiety, depression, or self-efficacy.
  • Adolescents with lower self-efficacy may require additional support to achieve treatment goals.

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