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Finding improvement
Both problem sleepers and non-problem sleepers gained significantly more total nighttime sleep following the mHealth behavioral sleep intervention, with the problem sleeper group gaining nearly twice as much sleep as the non-problem sleeper group.
Effect sizePS group gained 50.43 min (ES = 0.14); NPS group gained 26.96 min (ES = 0.02)
Follow-up4-28 days
Comparatorpre-intervention baseline (same infants before receiving CSP recommendations)
Effect summaryimprovement; PS group gained 50.43 min (ES = 0.14); NPS group gained 26.96 min (ES = 0.02)
Effect modifiers[{"modifier": "caregiver-perceived sleep problem status (PS vs NPS)", "interaction_p": "p < .05 for nighttime sleep", "direction": "amplifies", "stratum_details": "PS group gained 50.43 min nighttime sleep (ES = 0.14); NPS group gained 26.96 min (ES = 0.02). By follow-up, PS group exceeded NPS by 3.12 min in nighttime sleep.", "plain_language": "Problem sleepers gained almost twice as much nighttime sleep as non-problem sleepers \u2014 and by follow-up, they were actually sleeping slightly more at night", "annotation_notes": "Significant time by group interaction for nighttime sleep (Wilks' lambda = 0.99; F(1, 361) = 4.24, p < .05). The catch-up effect is notable."}]

Connected entities

Interventions
Conditions
Outcomes
Populations

Source

PMC7428151
Effectiveness of an mHealth Intervention for Infant Sleep Disturbances
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