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Effects of Chronobiology-guided Lifestyle Interventions on Insomnia Severity, Cognitive Performance, and Sleepiness

Effects of Chronobiology-guided Lifestyle Interventions on Insomnia Severity, Cognitive Performance, and Sleepiness

Non Recruiting
20-60 years
Female
Phase N/A

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Overview

Poor sleep is closely related to circadian misalignment; shift workers often experience shift work disorder characterized by excessive sleepiness and recurrent shift work schedules-associated insomnia. This study aims to examine the effects of a program of chronobiology-guided lifestyle interventions (CGLI) on insomnia severity, cognitive performance (psychomotor vigilance and processing speed), and sleepiness in female nurses undertaking rotating-shift work.

Description

This study will use a parallel-group, randomized, assessor-blind, wait-list controlled design to determine the effects of a program of multimodal lifestyle interventions based on chronobiology, consisting of timed bright light exposure, meal timing manipulations, and sleep hygiene education on insomnia severity, cognitive performance (psychomotor vigilance and processing speed), and sleepiness in female nurses undertaking rotating-shift work.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Females aged 20 to 60 who work full time as a nurse and work a 3-shift rotation, including day shifts, evening shifts, and night shifts in the most recent 6 months.
  2. Participants must complain of insomnia symptoms and/or sleepiness in relation to shift work schedule for at least 3 months.
  3. Participants must have10 workdays (evening or night shift) within a 14-day period during the study period.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Active physical diseases.
  2. Moderate to severe psychopathology.
  3. Medications or treatments that may affect sleep.
  4. Pregnant or breastfeeding.
  5. Participants must be free of ophthalmic pathology, eye surgery, and diseases affecting the retina or taking photosensitizing drugs.
  6. Participants who have been diagnosed with sleep-disordered breathing will be excluded. Sleep-disordered breathing such as obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) will be screened using the snoring, tiredness, observed apnea, high BP, BMI, age, neck circumference, and male gender (STOP-BANG) questionnaire.

Study details
    Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorder

NCT05569603

Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan

20 August 2025

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