Abstract
Background
Family caregivers are more likely to experience insomnia relative to noncaregivers but have significant barriers to accessing gold standard cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia treatment. Delivering interventions to caregivers through the internet may help increase access to care, particularly among higher-intensity caregivers who provide assistance with multiple care tasks over many hours per week. Although there are existing internet interventions that have been thoroughly studied and demonstrated as effective in the general population, the extent to which these interventions may be effective for caregivers without tailoring to address this population’s unique psychosocial needs has not been studied.
Objective
The goal of this trial is to determine what tailoring may be necessary for which caregivers to ensure they receive optimal benefit from an existing evidence-based, internet-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia program named Sleep Healthy Using the Internet (SHUTi). Specifically, we will test the association between caregivers’ engagement with SHUTi and their caregiving context characteristics (ie, caregiving strain, self-efficacy, and guilt) and environment (ie, proximity to care recipient; functional status, cognitive status, and problem behavior of care recipient; and type of care provided). Among caregivers using the program, we will also test the associations between change in known treatment mechanisms (sleep beliefs and sleep locus of control) and caregiving context factors.
Methods
A total of 100 higher-intensity caregivers with significant insomnia symptoms will be recruited from across the United States to receive access to SHUTi in an open-label trial with mixed methods preassessments and postassessments. At postassessment (9 weeks following preassessment completion), participants will be categorized according to their engagement with the program (nonusers, incomplete users, or complete users). Study analyses will address 3 specific aims: to examine the association between caregivers’ engagement with SHUTi and their caregiving context (aim 1a); to describe caregivers’ barriers to and motivations for SHUTi engagement from open-ended survey responses (aim 1b); and among caregivers using SHUTi, to determine whether cognitive mechanisms of change targeted by SHUTi are associated with differences in caregiving context (aim 2).
Results
Institutional review board approvals have been received. Data collection is anticipated to begin in December 2021 and is expected to be completed in 2023.
Conclusions
Findings will inform the next research steps for tailoring and testing SHUTi for optimal impact and reach among caregivers. Beyond implication to the SHUTi program, the findings will be translatable across intervention programs and will hold significant promise to reduce inefficiencies in developing digital health interventions for caregivers while also increasing their impact and reach for this underserved population.
Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov; NCT04986904; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04986904?term=NCT04986904
International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)
PRR1-10.2196/34792
Reference83 articles.
1. National Alliance for CaregivingCaregiving in the United States 2020AARP Public Policy Institute20202021-12-30https://www.aarp.org/ppi/info-2020/caregiving-in-the-united-states.html
2. ReinhardSFeinbergLChoulaRHouserAValuing the invaluable: 2015 updateAARP Public Policy Institute20152021-12-30https://www.thelundreport.org/sites/default/files/u19224/ValuingtheInvaluable_EMBARGOED%20UNTIL%20JULY%2016%202015.pdf
3. Characteristics and well-being of informal caregivers: Results from a nationally-representative US survey
4. Impact of Caregiving on Health and Quality of Life: A Comparative Population-Based Study of Caregivers for Elderly Persons and Noncaregivers
5. Insomnia among cancer caregivers: A proposal for tailored cognitive behavioral therapy.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献