Two arm study, intervention and control, to explore the impact of an app to help high risk teens with asthma improve their sleep
The investigators will use a randomized, two-group, pretest/posttest design to test the efficacy of the Personalized Approach To Habits - Sleep (PATH-S app) and explore the following research question: To what extent does exposure to the PATH-S app increase teens' knowledge, cues to action, perceived sleepiness, and self-efficacy related to improving sleep? PATH-S will use casual gaming and intermittent reinforcement techniques to encourage teens to adopt and persist with personalized habits to improve sleep duration. Researchers worked with subject matter experts, physicians, and the intended audience to ensure the PATH-S app reflects the specific needs of high risk teens with asthma; minimize counter-productive duplications of services and resource expenditure; and create empowered opportunities for teens to improve their overall sleep and habits. The Principal Investigator (PI), with input from the subject matter experts and physicians, developed necessary research materials, including the recruitment protocols, evaluation instrumentation, and human subjects consent materials . The PI also outlined the appropriate statistical analysis methods. All procedure documents were reviewed by the KDH Research \& Communication (KDHRC) Institutional Review Board before the evaluation launch. Investigators will recruit participants through evaluation partners who will disseminate the study information to teens via electronic notifications and flyers. Evaluation partners include national asthma organizations. The notifications and flyers provide information about the goal of the study, participant eligibility, and a link to an eligibility form. Once a potential participant completes the eligibility form and s/he is eligible for the study, they will receive a link to a consent form located on a secure online platform. After consent and enrollment into the study, teens will complete a pretest survey and be randomly assigned to the intervention or control group. The intervention group will be exposed to the PATH-S app, with educational material, and will complete an online posttest survey after 28 days. The control group participants will be exposed to a cloned copy of the PATH-S app, but without the educational material, and will complete an online posttest survey after 28 days. Participant responses to pretest and posttest survey measures will be linked using non-personal identifiers. The investigators will download and export the data from Alchemer, along with data logged on the app, into encrypted Excel files and import the raw data into STATA. The investigators will match the pretest and posttest responses using the non-personal identifiers and conduct analyses to test for the effect of the PATH-S app exposure on changes in teens' knowledge, cues to action, perceived sleepiness, and self-efficacy related to improving sleep. The initial feasibility criterion is: Statistically significant (p\<0.05) and positive relationship between exposure to PATH-S app and increased knowledge among the intervention group in comparison to the control group.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
120
PATH-S will use casual gaming and intermittent reinforcement techniques to encourage high risk teens to adopt and persist with personalized habits to improve sleep.
KDH Research & Communication
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
RECRUITINGKnowledge Pretest Score
Investigators will ask participants 8 multiple choice knowledge questions related to sleep health and habits which investigators will average to create a composite knowledge score for each participant ranging from 0 to 100. A score of 0 means a participant got zero questions correct while a score of 100 means a participant got all questions correct. Investigators will average these composite scores across all participants for both groups to create mean scores ranging from 0 to 100, the higher the score the more questions participants answer correctly.
Time frame: Baseline
Knowledge Posttest Score
Investigators will ask participants 8 multiple choice knowledge questions related to sleep health and habits which investigators will average to create a composite knowledge score for each participant ranging from 0 to 100. A score of 0 means a participant got zero questions correct while a score of 100 means a participant got all questions correct. Investigators will average these composite scores across all participants for both groups to create mean scores ranging from 0 to 100, the higher the score the more questions participants answer correctly.
Time frame: Posttest- 28 days
Cues to Action Pretest Score
Investigators will ask participants 9 Likert-type scale questions to measure cues to action, where they rate their level of agreement with various statements. Each answer choice rating will range from 1 to 10, with higher ratings representing higher perceptions of cues to action. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each participant ranging from 1 to 10, with 1 being the lowest score and 10 being the highest. Higher score means better outcome. Then, investigators will average these composite scores for each group.
Time frame: Baseline
Cues to Action Posttest Score
Investigators will ask participants 9 Likert-type scale questions to measure cues to action, where they rate their level of agreement with various statements. Each answer choice rating will range from 1 to 10, with higher ratings representing higher perceptions of cues to action. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each participant ranging from 1 to 10, with 1 being the lowest score and 10 being the highest. Higher score means better outcome. Then, investigators will average these composite scores for each group.
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Time frame: Posttest- 28 days
Self-efficacy Pretest Score
Investigators will ask participants 6 Likert-type scale questions related to perceived self-efficacy with improving sleep health. Each rating will range from 1 to 10, with higher ratings representing higher perceptions of confidence in improving sleep health. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each participant ranging from 1 to 10, with 1 being the lowest possible score and 10 being the highest score. Higher scores mean better outcomes. Then, investigators will average these composite scores for both groups.
Time frame: Baseline
Self-efficacy Posttest Score
Investigators will ask participants 6 Likert-type scale questions related to perceived self-efficacy with improving sleep health. Each rating will range from 1 to 10, with higher ratings representing higher perceptions of confidence in improving sleep health. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each participant ranging from 1 to 10, with 1 being the lowest possible score and 10 being the highest score. Higher scores mean better outcomes. Then, investigators will average these composite scores for both groups
Time frame: Posttest- 28 days
Sleepiness/Restfulness Pretest Score
Investigators will ask participants 5 Likert-type scale questions related to perceived sleepiness or tiredness during different situations. Each rating will range from 1 to 4, with higher ratings representing higher perceptions of tiredness. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each participant ranging from 1 to 4, with 1 being the lowest possible score and 4 being the highest score. Lower scores mean better outcomes. Then, investigators will average these composite scores for both groups.
Time frame: Baseline
Sleepiness/Restfulness Posttest Score
Investigators will ask participants 5 Likert-type scale questions related to perceived sleepiness or tiredness during different situations. Each rating will range from 1 to 4, with higher ratings representing higher perceptions of tiredness. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each participant ranging from 1 to 4, with 1 being the lowest possible score and 4 being the highest score. Lower scores mean better outcomes. Then, investigators will average these composite scores for both groups.
Time frame: Posttest- 28 days
Satisfaction at Posttest Score
Investigators will ask only the intervention group participants 5 Likert-type scale questions related to their satisfaction with the PATH-S app. Each rating will range from 1 to 10, with higher scores representing higher satisfaction with the PATH-S app. Investigators will average ratings from each question to create an average composite rating for each intervention participant, then investigators will average these scores across the intervention group. Scores will range from 1 to 10, with higher scores meaning better satisfaction/outcome.
Time frame: Posttest- 28 days