Journal article
Sleep Outcomes in Youth With Chronic Pain Participating in a Randomized Controlled Trial of Online Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Pain Management
Behavioral sleep medicine, Vol.13(2), pp.107-123
03/04/2015
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/2376/102516
PMCID: PMC4117832
PMID: 24484373
Abstract
Sleep disturbances are commonly reported in youth with chronic pain. We examined whether online cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for pain management would impact youth's sleep. Subjective sleep quality and actigraphic sleep were evaluated in 33 youth (M = 14.8 years; 70% female) with chronic pain participating in a larger randomized controlled trial of online-CBT. The Internet treatment condition (n = 17) received 8-10 weeks of online-CBT + standard care, and the wait-list control condition (n = 16) continued with standard care. Although pain improved with online-CBT, no changes were observed in sleep outcomes. Shorter pretreatment sleep duration was associated with less improvement in posttreatment functioning. Findings underscore the need for further development in psychological therapies to more intensively target sleep loss in youth with chronic pain.
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Details
- Title
- Sleep Outcomes in Youth With Chronic Pain Participating in a Randomized Controlled Trial of Online Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Pain Management
- Creators
- Jessica Fales - Seattle Children's Research InstituteTonya M Palermo - University of WashingtonEmily F Law - University of WashingtonAnna C Wilson - Oregon Health & Science University
- Publication Details
- Behavioral sleep medicine, Vol.13(2), pp.107-123
- Academic Unit
- Psychology, Department of
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Grant note
- K24HD060068; R01HD053431 / National Institutes of Health (10.13039/100000002)
- Identifiers
- 99900546687201842
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article