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Enrolling By InvitationNCT07499245

The Effect of Virtual Reality in Older Adults

The Effect of Virtual Reality on Sleep Quality and Comfort in Older Adults

Status
Enrolling By Invitation
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
Kafkas University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This research will be conducted to examine the effects of virtual reality on sleep quality and comfort in older adults. This research will be conducted as a single-blind, randomized controlled experimental study with a pre-test-post-test design, involving application and control groups, to examine the effect of virtual reality on sleep quality and comfort in elderly adult patients hospitalized in the internal medicine and surgical clinics of Kars Harakani State Hospital between December 15, 2025, and December 31, 2026. To inform older adults, and after obtaining informed consent, the study will be administered using a "Senior Adult Descriptive Information Form" containing demographic information about older adults, the Standardized Mini Mental Test which assesses the cognitive level of older adults, and a "Senior Adult Monitoring Form" to track any potential side effects of the intervention. The Senior Adult Descriptive Information Form, the Richards-Campbell Sleep Scale (RCSQ), and the VAS Comfort Scale (VCS) will be used to collect data for the study. Data will be collected from elderly adults hospitalized in the internal medicine and surgical clinics of Kars Harakani State Hospital who meet the research criteria. They will be shown 360-degree video images (Chitra and Eremita 2023; Eremita and Chitra 2024) for 20 minutes each night during their hospitalization hours using VR Shinecon virtual reality glasses.

Detailed description

This research will be conducted to examine the effect of virtual reality on sleep quality and comfort in older adults hospitalized in internal medicine and surgical clinics. New technologies such as virtual reality are gaining interest as a non-pharmacological intervention in various clinical settings(Lee et al. 2019; D'Cunha et al. 2019; Kim et al. 2024; Szczepocka et al. 2024; Szczepocka, Mokros et al. 2024). Virtual reality offers a unique opportunity to expose individuals to various simulated natural and social environments that can be both calming and engaging(Appel et al. 2020; Appel et al. 2021; Chitra and Eremita 2023; Eremita and Chitra 2024). Virtual reality provides visual and auditory stimuly.(Appel et al. 2020; Hung et al. 2025; Liu et al. 2025). In their study, Lee and Kang(2020) stated that virtual reality could be beneficial as a nursing intervention method for providing a positive cognitive stimulus and blocking environmental stimuly. Although virtual reality is generally sometimes seen as a technology geared towards young people, research has shown that it is easily adopted by many older individuals and has the potential to improve participation and well-being in older adults.(Lee at al. 2019; Syed-Abdul et al. 2019; D'Cunha et al. 2019; Dermody et al. 2020; Cheng et al. 2020; Kalantari et al. 2023; Cinalioglu et al. 2023; Hung et al. 2025). Sleep is a fundamental physiological process for life(Yan et al. 2022; Kim et al. 2024). Sleep disorders are a common problem during the aging process(Sun et al. 2016; Çınar Yücel et al. 2016; Tseng et al. 2020; Martini et al. 2024) and can significantly affect comfort(Martini et al. 2024). With the progression of age, falling asleep becomes difficult, sleep is interrupted by frequent awakenings, the depth of sleep decreases, and the time spent sleeping in bed increases, and as a result, sleep gradually moves away from being satisfying(Çınar Yücel et al. 2016). Insufficient sleep can lead to problems such as memory loss, lack of concentration, as well as heart disease, hypertension, arrhythmia, stroke and impairment of the immune system(Huang et al. 2022; Wan et al. 2024; Sharma and Dhaka 2025), may also lead to fatigue and excessive daytime sleepiness(Tseng et al. 2020; Chitra and Eremita 2023; Eremita and Chitra 2024).The use of virtual reality may also positively affect sleep quality(Lee and Kang 2020; Eremita and Chitra 2024; Martini et al. 2024; Liu et al. 2025; Sharma and Dhaka 2025). Virtual reality helps alleviate difficulties in falling asleep by targeting pre-sleep arousal(Zambotti et al. 2020; Sharma and Dhaka 2025). Virtual reality 360-degree video nature images can release Gamma-aminobutyric acid, which is necessary to support sleep(Chitra and Eremita 2023; Eremita and Chitra 2024) and increase relaxation(Zambotti et al. 2020; Cinalioglu et al. 2023; Martini et al. 2024; Wan et al. 2024; Sharma and Dhaka 2025). It was found that a 30-minute virtual reality meditation session on the evening of hospital admission positively affected the sleep quality of intensive care unit patients(Lee and Kang 2020). Chitra and Eremita(2023) and Kim et al.(2024)'s studies indicate that virtual reality can be used to improve the sleep quality of students experiencing sleep problems. In a study conducted to investigate the effectiveness of virtual reality therapy administered at home once daily in the evening for 6 weeks in chronic imsomnia patients, it was reported that virtual reality therapy improved sleep quality(Wan et al. 2024). Virtual reality is increasingly being used in elderly care settings, including long-term care(Lee at al. 2019; Hung et al. 2025). Older patients require regular sleep to live their lives in the best possible way and maintain their bodily functions(Çınar Yücel et al. 2016). Information regarding virtual reality for older adults is limited, and the research literature is still quite insufficient(Zambotti et al. 2020; Kalantari et al. 2023; Martini et al. 2024; Szczepocka, Mokros et al.2024; Sharma and Dhaka 2025). When examining the national and international literature; Virtual Reality Guided Imagery has been found to improve sleep quality among older adults(Martini et al. 2024; Sharma and Dhaka 2025-meta analysis study), Virtual Reality Exercise Games(Peng et al. 2024-meta analysis study ) and virtual reality combined with aromatherapy to improve comfort (Hung et al. 2025) it has been seen that there are studies in which it is used. It is believed that the virtual reality goggle application will enable elderly adults to relax their minds and bodies by blocking external stimuly, provide an innovative, effective, safe, and comfortable nursing care method that can be implemented without a doctor's prescription for the management of elderly adults' sleep problems, and contribute to the literature.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEusing virtual realityOlder adults with insomnia in the experimental group will undergo a 20-minute virtual reality session. Data will be collected from elderly adults hospitalized in the internal medicine and surgical clinics of Kars Harakani State Hospital who meet the research criteria. They will be shown 360-degree video images (Chitra and Eremita 2023; Eremita and Chitra 2024) for 20 minutes each night during their hospitalization hours using VR Shinecon virtual reality glasses. One of two 1-hour videos - one with a starry night sky and one with night rain sound - will be selected according to the elderly adults' preference. After each participant's use, the headphone jack of the virtual reality glasses will be wiped with an antiseptic solution. The "Richards-Campbell Sleep Scale (RCSQ)" and the "VAS Comfort Scale (VCS)" will be used to collect data.

Timeline

Start date
2026-03-01
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2026-12-01
First posted
2026-03-30
Last updated
2026-03-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07499245. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.