PURPOSE/ OBJECTIVES: To describe nocturnal awakenings and sleep environment interruptions experienced by children and adolescents hospitalized for two to four days to receive chemotherapy and to assess the relationships among nocturnal awakenings, sleep environment interruptions, sleep duration, and fatigue. DESIGN: Longitudinal, descriptive design. SETTING: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and Texas Children's Cancer Center. SAMPLE: 25 patients with solid tumors and 4 with acute myeloid leukemia. METHODS: Actigraphy, fatigue instruments, sleep diary, room entry and exit checklists, and blood samples. MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES: Nocturnal awakenings, sleep environment interruptions, sleep duration, and fatigue. FINDINGS: The number of nocturnal awakenings per night as measured by actigraphy ranged from 0-40. The number of room entries and exits by a staff member or parent was 3-22 times per eight-hour night shift. The number of nocturnal awakenings was related to fatigue by patient report; patients who experienced 20 or more awakenings had significantly higher fatigue scores than those with fewer awakenings. Nocturnal awakenings also were significantly associated with sleep duration by patient and parent report. CONCLUSIONS: Hospitalized pediatric patients with cancer who experience more nocturnal awakenings are more fatigued and sleep longer. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING: Nurses may be able to control some of the factors that contribute to nocturnal awakenings and sleep environment interruptions that affect fatigue and sleep duration in hospitalized pediatric patients with cancer.
PURPOSE/ OBJECTIVES: To describe nocturnal awakenings and sleep environment interruptions experienced by children and adolescents hospitalized for two to four days to receive chemotherapy and to assess the relationships among nocturnal awakenings, sleep environment interruptions, sleep duration, and fatigue. DESIGN: Longitudinal, descriptive design. SETTING: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital and Texas Children's Cancer Center. SAMPLE: 25 patients with solid tumors and 4 with acute myeloid leukemia. METHODS: Actigraphy, fatigue instruments, sleep diary, room entry and exit checklists, and blood samples. MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES: Nocturnal awakenings, sleep environment interruptions, sleep duration, and fatigue. FINDINGS: The number of nocturnal awakenings per night as measured by actigraphy ranged from 0-40. The number of room entries and exits by a staff member or parent was 3-22 times per eight-hour night shift. The number of nocturnal awakenings was related to fatigue by patient report; patients who experienced 20 or more awakenings had significantly higher fatigue scores than those with fewer awakenings. Nocturnal awakenings also were significantly associated with sleep duration by patient and parent report. CONCLUSIONS: Hospitalized pediatric patients with cancer who experience more nocturnal awakenings are more fatigued and sleep longer. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING: Nurses may be able to control some of the factors that contribute to nocturnal awakenings and sleep environment interruptions that affect fatigue and sleep duration in hospitalized pediatric patients with cancer.
Authors: Anna Spathis; Sara Booth; Sarah Grove; Helen Hatcher; Isla Kuhn; Stephen Barclay Journal: J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol Date: 2015-03 Impact factor: 2.223
Authors: Germán Velez-Florez; María Camila Velez-Florez; Jose Oscar Mantilla-Rivas; Liliana Patarroyo-Rodríguez; Rodrigo Borrero-León; Santiago Rodríguez-León Journal: Curr Psychiatry Rep Date: 2018-07-21 Impact factor: 5.285
Authors: Ann M Berger; Kathi Mooney; Amy Alvarez-Perez; William S Breitbart; Kristen M Carpenter; David Cella; Charles Cleeland; Efrat Dotan; Mario A Eisenberger; Carmen P Escalante; Paul B Jacobsen; Catherine Jankowski; Thomas LeBlanc; Jennifer A Ligibel; Elizabeth Trice Loggers; Belinda Mandrell; Barbara A Murphy; Oxana Palesh; William F Pirl; Steven C Plaxe; Michelle B Riba; Hope S Rugo; Carolina Salvador; Lynne I Wagner; Nina D Wagner-Johnston; Finly J Zachariah; Mary Anne Bergman; Courtney Smith Journal: J Natl Compr Canc Netw Date: 2015-08 Impact factor: 11.908