The city of Washington, District Of Columbia, currently has 3 active clinical trials seeking participants for Insomnia research studies.
The Effects of Treating Insomnia on Behavioral Weight Loss Outcomes in Survivors of Breast Cancer
Recruiting
The investigators propose a randomized controlled clinical trial in 250 women with a history of early stage breast cancer who are overweight or obese with insomnia to test whether a brief, cognitive-behavioral intervention for insomnia (CBT-I) prior to behavioral weight loss (CBT-I+BWL) is superior to a sleep education control (EDU) condition followed by behavioral weight loss (EDU+BWL). The investigators will measure outcomes at baseline, 8 weeks (after completing CBT-I or EDU and prior to BWL)... Read More
Gender:
Female
Ages:
18 years and above
Trial Updated:
02/01/2024
Locations: Sibley Memorial Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia
Conditions: Breast Cancer, Insomnia, Weight Gain
Device Feasibility and Acceptability to Improve Insomnia in Cancer
Recruiting
Sleep disruption is common among young adult cancer survivors for a variety of reasons. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) has been shown to improve chronic sleep disorders. This project will test the feasibility and acceptability of a new voice-activated virtual assistant (VAVA) device to deliver CBT-I to improve sleep among young adult cancer survivors with chronic sleep disorders.
Gender:
All
Ages:
Between 18 years and 39 years
Trial Updated:
10/04/2023
Locations: MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, District of Columbia
Conditions: Cancer, Insomnia Chronic
mHealth for Breast Cancer Survivors With Insomnia
Recruiting
The aim of this study is to determine the impact of the voice-activated smart speaker CBT-I components on insomnia symptoms among breast cancer survivors using a randomized clinical trial.
Gender:
Female
Ages:
18 years and above
Trial Updated:
06/14/2023
Locations: MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, District of Columbia
Conditions: Breast Cancer Survivor, Insomnia