Status:

UNKNOWN

Non-inferiority Study of Telemedicine Versus Conventional CBT-I in Recently Hospitalized Patients With Insomnia

Lead Sponsor:

University of Arizona

Collaborating Sponsors:

American Academy of Sleep Medicine

Conditions:

Insomnia

Eligibility:

All Genders

18+ years

Phase:

NA

Brief Summary

Insomnia is a common medical condition that has a deleterious effect on emotional status, health-related quality of life, and has been associated with hospitalizations and all-cause mortality. Recentl...

Detailed Description

Insomnia is a common and distressing medical condition that affects nearly 20% of U.S. adults, and persistent (or chronic) insomnia affects nearly 10-15% of U.S. adults. In a community-based prospecti...

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

  • Medically ill patients with recent hospitalization who are being discharged to home.
  • ISI score of \> 10 (chronic insomnia)
  • Age \> 18 years
  • Ability to provide informed consent
  • Willingness to undergo sleep study

Exclusion

  • Presence of untreated sleep disorder that requires treatment independent of insomnia (Narcolepsy, restless leg syndrome, or REM sleep behavior disorder)
  • Patients with severe debilitating neurological disease (end-stage Alzheimer's, large stroke, or other debilitating neurological disease) or any other condition that renders patients incapable of providing informed consent
  • History of Bipolar disease; current or past (\< 6 months) history of suicidality or suicidal ideation
  • Active substance abuse or alcoholism
  • Pregnancy or lactation

Key Trial Info

Start Date :

June 13 2017

Trial Type :

INTERVENTIONAL

Allocation :

ESTIMATED

End Date :

May 31 2019

Estimated Enrollment :

74 Patients enrolled

Trial Details

Trial ID

NCT03267537

Start Date

June 13 2017

End Date

May 31 2019

Last Update

September 1 2017

Active Locations (1)

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1

University of Arizona (Banner University Medical Center - Tucson & Banner University Medical Center - South)

Tucson, Arizona, United States, 85721

Non-inferiority Study of Telemedicine Versus Conventional CBT-I in Recently Hospitalized Patients With Insomnia | DecenTrialz