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題名 366 Predictors of dropout in university students participating in an 8-week e-mail based cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia
作者 楊建銘
Yang, Chien-Ming
Nam, Hyojin;Chang, Jinyoung;Manber, Rachel;Trockel, Mickey;Okajima, Isa;Li, Shirley;Suh, Sooyeon
貢獻者 心理系
日期 2021-05
上傳時間 23-Aug-2022 15:08:17 (UTC+8)
摘要 Introduction: As dropout from treatment potentially diminishes its therapeutic effect and poses clinical concern, it is important to find out which characteristics of participants are suitable for online-based treatment. Therefore, we aimed to identify factors that predicted a dropout in the e-mail based cognitive behavioral therapy (REFRESH) developed by Stanford University for the purpose of psychological intervention for insomnia.
Methods: Participants who participated in the REFRESH program consisted of 158 university and graduate students aged 18 to 30 in Hong Kong and Korea who scored higher than 10 on the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), and the intervention was delivered in 8 weekly sessions sent via weekly e-mails. Among them, 110 were women (70%) and the average age was 22 (±2.71) years old. All participants were asked to answer the following self-reporting questionnaires before and after the intervention: Insomnia Severity Index; ISI, Depression Anxiety Stress Scale 21; DASS-21, Sleep Hygiene Practice Scale; SHPS, Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitude about Sleep 16; DBAS-16. Descriptive statistics and ROC decision tree analysis were conducted to address our aim.
Results: Of the 158 participants, 68 completed the program, and 90 participants (57%) dropped out. The best predictor of dropout was DASS score with an optimal cup-point of <34. Of the 107 participants who reported DASS <30, 70(65.4%) dropped out. In contrast, of the 50 participants who reported DASS ≥34, 12(38%) dropped out. The second-level predictor was expectations for sleep score with a cut-point of <18. Among participants with DASS <34 and expectations for sleep score <18, 57(73.1%) dropped out. Of the 29 participants who reported DASS <34 and expectations for sleep score ≥18, 13(44.8%) dropped out.
Conclusion: Mild levels of depression, anxiety and stress and expectations for sleep appear to be predictive of dropout in an e-mail based intervention. People with mild symptoms may experience less distress and impairment, which may result in lower motivation to receive treatment. This may lead to inability to complete treatment and higher rates of dropout.
關聯 Sleep, 44(Supplement 2), pp. A145-A146
資料類型 article
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab072.365
dc.contributor 心理系
dc.creator (作者) 楊建銘
dc.creator (作者) Yang, Chien-Ming
dc.creator (作者) Nam, Hyojin;Chang, Jinyoung;Manber, Rachel;Trockel, Mickey;Okajima, Isa;Li, Shirley;Suh, Sooyeon
dc.date (日期) 2021-05
dc.date.accessioned 23-Aug-2022 15:08:17 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 23-Aug-2022 15:08:17 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 23-Aug-2022 15:08:17 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/141498-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) Introduction: As dropout from treatment potentially diminishes its therapeutic effect and poses clinical concern, it is important to find out which characteristics of participants are suitable for online-based treatment. Therefore, we aimed to identify factors that predicted a dropout in the e-mail based cognitive behavioral therapy (REFRESH) developed by Stanford University for the purpose of psychological intervention for insomnia.
Methods: Participants who participated in the REFRESH program consisted of 158 university and graduate students aged 18 to 30 in Hong Kong and Korea who scored higher than 10 on the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), and the intervention was delivered in 8 weekly sessions sent via weekly e-mails. Among them, 110 were women (70%) and the average age was 22 (±2.71) years old. All participants were asked to answer the following self-reporting questionnaires before and after the intervention: Insomnia Severity Index; ISI, Depression Anxiety Stress Scale 21; DASS-21, Sleep Hygiene Practice Scale; SHPS, Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitude about Sleep 16; DBAS-16. Descriptive statistics and ROC decision tree analysis were conducted to address our aim.
Results: Of the 158 participants, 68 completed the program, and 90 participants (57%) dropped out. The best predictor of dropout was DASS score with an optimal cup-point of <34. Of the 107 participants who reported DASS <30, 70(65.4%) dropped out. In contrast, of the 50 participants who reported DASS ≥34, 12(38%) dropped out. The second-level predictor was expectations for sleep score with a cut-point of <18. Among participants with DASS <34 and expectations for sleep score <18, 57(73.1%) dropped out. Of the 29 participants who reported DASS <34 and expectations for sleep score ≥18, 13(44.8%) dropped out.
Conclusion: Mild levels of depression, anxiety and stress and expectations for sleep appear to be predictive of dropout in an e-mail based intervention. People with mild symptoms may experience less distress and impairment, which may result in lower motivation to receive treatment. This may lead to inability to complete treatment and higher rates of dropout.
dc.format.extent 105 bytes-
dc.format.mimetype text/html-
dc.relation (關聯) Sleep, 44(Supplement 2), pp. A145-A146
dc.title (題名) 366 Predictors of dropout in university students participating in an 8-week e-mail based cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia
dc.type (資料類型) article
dc.identifier.doi (DOI) 10.1093/sleep/zsab072.365
dc.doi.uri (DOI) https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsab072.365