Mairead E Moloney1, Ashley I Martinez2, Christal L Badour3, Daniela C Moga2. 1. Department of Sociology, University of Kentucky , Lexington. 2. Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science, University of Kentucky , Lexington. 3. Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky , Lexington.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE/ BACKGROUND: Appalachian women are disproportionately affected by insufficient sleep but live in a healthcare shortage area with prevalent prescription drug abuse. A self-administered, non-pharmacologic intervention such as Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) may be ideal in this population, but psycho-social characteristics (e.g., high depression rates) and cultural norms (e.g., suspicion of technology) necessitate a pilot study. We evaluated the effectiveness of Sleep Healthy Using the Internet (SHUTi) on insomnia severity, sleep quality, perceived stress, depression symptoms, and sleep aid use in Appalachian women ages 45 +. PARTICIPANTS: Forty-six women enrolled; 38 completed the six-week intervention in 2018 (mean age 55 years). METHODS: We employed a single group, pre/post-test, mixed-methods design. Participants completed an online survey and a qualitative interview pre- and post-intervention. Quantitative data were analyzed using one-way repeated measures ANOVA or generalized estimating equations. Interviews were qualitatively analyzed using a multi-stage coding process. RESULTS: Positive and statistically significant (p < .01) improvements were observed on mean scores for the Insomnia Severity Index (15.1 to 6.5), the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (12.1 to 8.5), the Perceived Stress Scale (20 to 14.6), and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale Revised (9.8 to 5.2). The odds of reporting sleep medication use post-intervention were significantly lower than pre-intervention (OR 0.28 [95% CI 0.11-0.74]). Interviews highlighted most and least helpful intervention components and suggested that participants benefitted from SHUTi. CONCLUSIONS: Internet-based CBT-I may be a useful, non-pharmacologic treatment that reduces insomnia severity, perceived stress, depression symptoms, and sleep aid use in middle-aged Appalachian women.
OBJECTIVE/ BACKGROUND: Appalachian women are disproportionately affected by insufficient sleep but live in a healthcare shortage area with prevalent prescription drug abuse. A self-administered, non-pharmacologic intervention such as Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) may be ideal in this population, but psycho-social characteristics (e.g., high depression rates) and cultural norms (e.g., suspicion of technology) necessitate a pilot study. We evaluated the effectiveness of Sleep Healthy Using the Internet (SHUTi) on insomnia severity, sleep quality, perceived stress, depression symptoms, and sleep aid use in Appalachian women ages 45 +. PARTICIPANTS: Forty-six women enrolled; 38 completed the six-week intervention in 2018 (mean age 55 years). METHODS: We employed a single group, pre/post-test, mixed-methods design. Participants completed an online survey and a qualitative interview pre- and post-intervention. Quantitative data were analyzed using one-way repeated measures ANOVA or generalized estimating equations. Interviews were qualitatively analyzed using a multi-stage coding process. RESULTS: Positive and statistically significant (p < .01) improvements were observed on mean scores for the Insomnia Severity Index (15.1 to 6.5), the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (12.1 to 8.5), the Perceived Stress Scale (20 to 14.6), and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale Revised (9.8 to 5.2). The odds of reporting sleep medication use post-intervention were significantly lower than pre-intervention (OR 0.28 [95% CI 0.11-0.74]). Interviews highlighted most and least helpful intervention components and suggested that participants benefitted from SHUTi. CONCLUSIONS: Internet-based CBT-I may be a useful, non-pharmacologic treatment that reduces insomnia severity, perceived stress, depression symptoms, and sleep aid use in middle-aged Appalachian women.
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