Impact of an internet-based insomnia intervention on suicidal ideation and associated correlates in veterans at elevated suicide risk.

IF 3.6 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Translational Behavioral Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-16 DOI:10.1093/tbm/ibae032
Sarra Nazem, Shengnan Sun, Sean M Barnes, Lindsey L Monteith, Trisha A Hostetter, Jeri E Forster, Lisa A Brenner, Hanga Galfalvy, Fatemeh Haghighi
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Abstract

Improving public health approaches to suicide prevention requires scalable evidence-based interventions that can be easily disseminated. Given empirical data supporting the association between insomnia and suicide risk, internet-delivered insomnia interventions are promising candidates to meet this need. The purpose of this study was to examine whether an unguided internet-delivered cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (iCBT-I) improved insomnia severity, suicidal ideation (SI), and suicide risk correlates (depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, hostility, belongingness, hopelessness, agitation, irritability, concentration) in a sample of veterans. Secondary data analysis of Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Operation New Dawn veterans (n = 50) with clinically significant insomnia and elevated SI drawn from a larger randomized controlled trial (RCT) of an iCBT-I, Sleep Healthy Using the Internet (SHUTi). Two-sample t-tests or Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to evaluate between-group differences (SHUTi vs. Insomnia Education Website control) in symptom improvement from baseline to post-intervention. SHUTi participants experienced a significant improvement in insomnia severity (P < .001; d = -1.08) and a non-significant with small (subthreshold medium) effect size reduction of SI (P = .17, d = 0.40), compared to control participants. Significant improvement in hopelessness was observed (medium effect size), with non-significant small to medium effect size reductions in most remaining suicide risk correlates. Self-administered iCBT-I was associated with improvements in insomnia severity in veterans at elevated risk for suicide. These preliminary findings suggest that SI and suicide risk correlates may improve following an iCBT-I intervention, demonstrating the need for future well-powered iCBT-I RCTs targeted for populations at elevated suicide risk.

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基于互联网的失眠干预对自杀风险较高的退伍军人的自杀意念及相关联因素的影响。
要改进预防自杀的公共卫生方法,就必须采取易于推广的可扩展循证干预措施。鉴于实证数据支持失眠与自杀风险之间的关联,通过互联网提供的失眠干预措施有望满足这一需求。本研究的目的是在退伍军人样本中研究一种无指导的互联网传播失眠认知行为疗法(iCBT-I)是否能改善失眠严重程度、自杀意念(SI)和自杀风险相关因素(抑郁、创伤后应激障碍、焦虑、敌意、归属感、绝望、烦躁、易怒、注意力不集中)。对 "持久自由行动"、"伊拉克自由行动 "和 "新曙光行动 "的退伍军人(50 人)进行二次数据分析,这些退伍军人在临床上有明显的失眠症状,且 SI 升高,这些数据来自于一项更大规模的 iCBT-I 随机对照试验(RCT),即 "使用互联网实现健康睡眠"(SHUTi)。采用双样本 t 检验或 Wilcoxon 秩和检验来评估从基线到干预后症状改善情况的组间差异(SHUTi 与失眠教育网站对照组)。与对照组相比,SHUTi 参与者的失眠严重程度有明显改善(P < .001;d =-1.08),而 SI 的减少则不明显,只有很小(亚阈值中等)的影响大小(P = .17,d = 0.40)。与对照组相比,无望感有显著改善(中等效应),其余大多数自杀风险相关因素均有非显著性的小到中等效应降低。在自杀风险较高的退伍军人中,自我管理的 iCBT-I 与失眠严重程度的改善相关。这些初步研究结果表明,在接受 iCBT-I 干预后,SI 和自杀风险相关因素可能会得到改善,这表明今后有必要针对自杀风险较高的人群进行有充分证据支持的 iCBT-I RCT 研究。
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来源期刊
Translational Behavioral Medicine
Translational Behavioral Medicine PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: Translational Behavioral Medicine publishes content that engages, informs, and catalyzes dialogue about behavioral medicine among the research, practice, and policy communities. TBM began receiving an Impact Factor in 2015 and currently holds an Impact Factor of 2.989. TBM is one of two journals published by the Society of Behavioral Medicine. The Society of Behavioral Medicine is a multidisciplinary organization of clinicians, educators, and scientists dedicated to promoting the study of the interactions of behavior with biology and the environment, and then applying that knowledge to improve the health and well-being of individuals, families, communities, and populations.
期刊最新文献
Differing conceptual maps of skills for implementing evidence-based interventions held by community-based organization practitioners and academics: A multidimensional scaling comparison. Impact of an internet-based insomnia intervention on suicidal ideation and associated correlates in veterans at elevated suicide risk. Practitioner perspectives on equitable implementation of evidence-based interventions for cancer prevention and control. Scalable and successful patient portal lifestyle coaching training for primary care clinical staff. The development and evaluation of the Designing for Dissemination and Implementation Learning Hub.
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