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Evaluating the Feasibility of a Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Children With Nightmares as a Mediator of Suicide Risk
Youth suicide risk has increased 56% in the last decade, and suicide is the leading cause of preventable death in children and adolescents. Experiencing chronic nightmares doubles the risk of suicidal ideation in children and adolescents. Decades of research support that even when controlling for depression and insomnia, nightmares predict suicidality. Contemporary theories model nightmares as the mediating link between depression and suicide. Numerous studies examine the effect of nightmare-specific therapies on reducing suicide in adults, but none have examined whether nightmare therapies can reduce youth suicidality. The proposed pilot will evaluate the feasibility of the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Nightmares in Children paradigm (CBT-NC), recruiting and retaining children ages 6-17 who experience chronic nightmares. Utilizing a waitlist control (WL) model, participants (n=30) will be randomized after baseline assessment to either immediate treatment or a WL. Feasibility will be evaluated by examining retention through treatment (or WL) to post WL and post treatment assessments. Both groups will be evaluated before and after the treatment for suicidal ideation, sleep quality, and nightmare distress and frequency, in order to document improvements due to therapy. The proposed pilot will provide preliminary data about recruitment, retention, and allow for effect size calculations between groups. These results will be used to develop a larger treatment study that would ultimately evaluate the mediating effect of treatment for chronic nightmares on suicidality in children.
Age
6 - 17 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
University of Tulsa
Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine
Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
Start Date
September 30, 2020
Primary Completion Date
June 16, 2023
Completion Date
June 16, 2023
Last Updated
June 22, 2023
58
ACTUAL participants
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
University of Oklahoma
Collaborators
NCT06441864
NCT07069517
Data Source & Attribution
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