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Are sleep education programs successful The case for improved and consistent research efforts
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Sarah BlundenSarah Blunden, J Chapman, Gabrielle RigneyGabrielle RigneySleep duration and quality are associated with a range of neuropsychological and psychosocial outcomes in children and adolescents but community awareness of this is low. A small body of literature on sleep education programs in children and adolescents delivered through school-based programs is attempting to address this. A review of the literature found only 8 studies and 4 pilot studies in abstract form. This paper presents these sleep education programs and evaluates their effectiveness. In general, findings suggest that when sleep knowledge was measured it was increased in most programs. However this did not necessarily equate to sleep behaviour change such as increased sleep duration or improved sleep hygiene. Reasons for this are discussed and may include motivation and readiness to change, salience to the individual, delivery, content, time allocation, or methodological underpinnings. This paper attempts to understand this and assess how best to improve future sleep education programs from a theoretical perspective. Specifically, it considers the theory of planned behaviour which may assist in ensuring maximum efficacy for the current and future development of sleep education programs. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.
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Volume
16Issue
4Start Page
355End Page
370Number of Pages
16eISSN
1532-2955ISSN
1087-0792Full Text URL
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Era Eligible
- Yes
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Sleep Medicine ReviewsUsage metrics
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