Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06814613

The Effect of Progressive Relaxation Exercises on the Sleep Quality of Nursing Students

The Effect of Progressive Relaxation Exercises Administered Via Telenursing on the Sleep Quality of Nursing Students After the Earthquake in Turkey

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
86 (actual)
Sponsor
Inonu University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Aim: The study aims to examine the effect of progressive relaxation exercises administered to nursing students via telenursing on sleep quality after the February 6 earthquake in Turkey. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted as a randomized controlled study. The study population consisted of first-, second-, and third-year nursing students enrolled in the nursing departments of two universities located in eastern Turkey, who were residing in one of the 11 cities affected by the earthquake during the February 6 Turkey earthquake. The sample included 86 students (40 experimental, 46 control). While the control group received no intervention, the experimental group received progressive relaxation exercises for 20 minutes every night for 4 weeks, 1 hour before the routine bedtime (or the time they planned to go to sleep) by making a video call (via Google Meet application) with the student. Data were collected using a personal information form and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Scale. Descriptive statistical methods (frequency, percentage, arithmetic mean, standard deviation), independent groups t-test, and paired t-test were used to evaluate the data. Conclusion: The research results can showed that progressive relaxation exercises could be an effective intervention in improving sleep quality after an earthquake. Additionally, conducting these exercises via telenursing could contribute significantly to the sustainability and control of the intervention.

Detailed description

* If the students have any pre-sleep habits (using aromatic oil, massage, listening to music, etc.) that they routinely practice and that may affect the results of the study, they will be asked not to do so for 6 weeks. * A video call is made with the students. * The procedure is explained to the patient and any questions are answered or concerns are addressed. * If possible, the patient is asked to move to a ventilated room away from noise so that the procedure can be performed comfortably and not interrupted. * Procedure * It is explained to the individual that the procedure can be done sitting or lying down and he/she is asked to release his/her muscles and take a comfortable position. * The individual is asked to close his/her eyes and focus only on his/her body. * For 5 seconds, the individual is asked to take a slow deep breath. * He/she is asked to breathe out in a controlled manner in 3-4 seconds. * The process of taking a deep breath in 5 seconds and giving it back in 3-4 seconds is repeated 3 times. * While breathing, the individual is asked to squeeze his/her forehead muscles by raising his/her eyebrows as high as possible at the same time. * After 10 seconds of tightening the forehead muscles, the patient is asked to slowly lower his/her eyebrows and slowly relax and release the forehead muscles while exhaling. He/she is encouraged to feel the relaxation in the forehead muscles. * The individual is asked to take a deep breath, close his/her eyes tightly and squeeze the muscles around the eyes. * After 10 seconds of tightening the muscles around the eyes, he/she is asked to slowly relax and release the muscles around the eyes while exhaling. With muscle

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERExerciseFor the next 4 weeks, every night, 1 hour before the routine bedtime (or the time when the student planned to sleep), a video call (via the Google Meet application) was made with the student, and progressive relaxation exercises were performed. The exercise took approximately 20 minutes and followed the implementation protocol (Davis et al., 2008; Payne, 2000). Group interviews were conducted for students with similar sleep hours. They were asked to move to a ventilated room away from noise so that the exercises could be practiced comfortably and not interrupted.

Timeline

Start date
2023-12-01
Primary completion
2024-02-15
Completion
2024-03-30
First posted
2025-02-07
Last updated
2025-02-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06814613. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.