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NCT05763030 | NOT YET RECRUITING | Sleep


Sleep Promotion Intervention in Bangladesh
Sponsor:

Columbia University

Information provided by (Responsible Party):

Ayesha Sania

Brief Summary:

Using a pragmatic cluster randomized trial, this study aims to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a 3-week behavioral sleep intervention and to test the preliminary efficacy of the intervention compared to a wait-list control with children ages 2-3 years old at two Early Learning Centers on preschooler's sleep health in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The investigators will use novel, inexpensive wearable technology to measure sleep health of children at ages 2, 3, and 4 years in a total of 60 families of 2-3 year-old healthy children and teachers from both childcare centers. The program teaches early childhood educators about healthy sleep for young children and will train them to be confident facilitators of educational conversations about sleep with parents. Parent questionnaires and sleep characteristics of children (actigraphy and parent report) will be collected at three-time points- Time 1, 2, and 3. Time 1 is the first Baseline Data Collection for the Control Group and Intervention Group, and these data will be collected before either group starts the 3-week intervention. Between Time 1 and Time 2, the Intervention Group will receive the 3-week intervention at the childcare center. Time 2 data collection for both groups will occur during the week following the completion of the intervention received by the Intervention Group. Time 2 data will serve as post-intervention data for the Intervention Group.

Condition or disease

Sleep

Intervention/treatment

Adapted Sleep Well, Bee Well (SWBW)

Phase

NA

Detailed Description:

Poor sleep in children is a growing public health concern worldwide. Sleep health is a multidimensional construct (sleep-related behaviors, satisfaction, alertness, timing, efficiency, and duration) influenced by a complex interplay of social-ecological factors. Sleep impacts a range of physical health and neurodevelopmental outcomes including children's executive function (EF), growth, and obesity risk, which are public health priorities in low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs). Early EFs are predictive of social competence and academic performance and economic achievement in later life. Childhood obesity is a rapidly growing health issue in LMICs and a leading risk factor of diabetes. Interventions targeting modifiable sleep behavior have the potential to improve long-term physical and neurodevelopmental outcomes for millions of children in LMICs. Most data on children's sleep health are from high-income settings, and the recommendations based on these studies are not directly relevant to LMICs. Emerging evidence shows multiple cross-cultural differences in sleep dimensions in early childhood. Children in Asian countries have a significantly later bedtime and shorter sleep duration compared to children in Western countries. Recent research and our preliminary data suggest that 40% of preschool children in urban Bangladesh sleep less than the recommended duration (10-13 hours) by the World Health Organization (WHO). Evidence from high-income settings links individual (e.g., age, screen time, physical activity), interpersonal (e.g., maternal mood, parenting stress, mother-child interaction), and social (e.g., social socioeconomic condition, household crowding) factors to childhood sleep. We aim to study the determinants of sleep health using a socioecological framework, and the role of sleep health on growth and neurodevelopmental outcomes among 300 preschool children in Bangladesh, a lower-middle-income country in South Asia.

Study Type : INTERVENTIONAL
Estimated Enrollment : 60 participants
Masking : NONE
Primary Purpose : PREVENTION
Official Title : Sleep Promotion Intervention for Preschool Children in Bangladesh
Actual Study Start Date : 2027-04
Estimated Primary Completion Date : 2028-04
Estimated Study Completion Date : 2028-06

Information not available for Arms and Intervention/treatment

Ages Eligible for Study: 2 Years to 3 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study: ALL
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: 1
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
  • * Healthy children aged 2-3 years
  • * Attending early learning centers
Exclusion Criteria
  • * Diagnosed with cerebral palsy, severe developmental delay, cardiac disease, or autism
  • * Known to be born preterm or low birth weight.

Sleep Promotion Intervention in Bangladesh

Location Details

NCT05763030


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Locations


Not yet recruiting

Bangladesh,

International Centre for Diarrhoeal Research, Bangladesh

Dhaka, Bangladesh, 1212

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