A systematic review and meta-analysis of cognitive and behavioral interventions to improve sleep health in adults without sleep disorders.

Sleep medicine reviews. 2018;40:160-169
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Sleep is important for good health but more than a quarter of the adult population reports poor quality sleep. This review and meta-analysis looked at cognitive and behavioural interventions in adults who report poor sleep but are not diagnosed with a clinical sleep disorder. The most commonly used interventions were stress management/relaxation, meditation, controlled breathing and stimulus control. A meta-analysis showed a medium improvement of overall sleep quality and a small but significant improvement of subjective sleep quality and duration with cognitive and behavioural interventions. The effects were bigger when sleep at baseline was worse. Effects of mode of delivery, study duration and the inclusion of a relaxation component were not assessed, due to insufficient numbers. The authors conclude that there is room for improvements of cognitive and behavioural interventions and call for more investigations into this.

Abstract

Many adults without a diagnosed sleep disorder report poor sleep health, which is defined by dissatisfactory levels of sleep duration, sleep quality, or the timing of sleep. No previous review has summarized and described interventions targeting poor sleep health in this population. This meta-analysis aimed to quantify the efficacy of behavioral and cognitive sleep interventions in adults with poor sleep health, who do not have a sleep disorder. Electronic databases (Medline, Embase, PsycInfo, Cinahl) were searched with restrictions for age (18-64 y) and English language full-text, resulting in 18,009 records being screened and 592 full-texts being assessed. Eleven studies met inclusion criteria, seven of which reported a measure of overall sleep health (Pittsburgh sleep quality index [PSQI]). Following appraisal for risk of bias, extracted data were meta-analyzed using random-effects models. Meta-analyses showed interventions had a medium effect on sleep quality (Hedge's g = -0.54, [95% confidence interval (CI)] -0.90 to -0.19, p < 0.01). Baseline sleep health was the only significant effect moderator (p = 0.01). The most frequently used intervention components were stress management and relaxation practice, stimulus control, sleep hygiene, and exercise. Interventions targeting cognitive and behavioral self-regulation improve sleep quality in adults without clinical sleep disorder.

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Hormonal ; Neurological
Patient Centred Factors : Mediators/Sleep
Environmental Inputs : Mind and spirit
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Sleep and relaxation
Functional Laboratory Testing : Not applicable

Methodological quality

Allocation concealment : Not applicable

Metadata