Àá½Ã¸¸ ±â´Ù·Á ÁÖ¼¼¿ä. ·ÎµùÁßÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
KMID : 1123620230210020069
Journal of Korean Society of Sensory Integration Therapists
2023 Volume.21 No. 2 p.69 ~ p.83
A Systematic Study of the Intervention Effect of Social Stories in Children with Sleep Disorders
Kang Won-Jun

Yoo Eun-Young
Abstract
Objective : This study sought to systematically examine the intervention effect of social stories when applied in relation to children with sleep disorders.

Methods : Studies available in the SCOPUS, ScienceDirect, PsycArticles, and PubMed databases that were published from 2001 to 2022 were searched. The keywords used for the search were as follows: (¡°social story¡± OR ¡°social stories¡±) AND (¡°sleep¡± OR ¡°sleep disorders¡± OR ¡°sleep wake disorder bedtimes¡± OR ¡°sleep initiation and maintenance disorders¡± OR ¡°sleep wake disorder¡± OR ¡°sleep arousal disorders¡±). Based on the selection criteria, six experimental studies were selected and analyzed.

Results : The selected studies were two randomized controlled trials, three individual trials, and one case study. The subjects were mostly children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder who were school-aged or adolescent. The intervention types were often complex interventions, including social stories and other interventions, while the durations of the interventions varied from one day to more than 40 days. The interventions had a positive effect on the subjects¡¯ sleep quality, with night wakings, sleep onset delay, and sleep anxiety all being improved. As standardized assessment tools to evaluate the effectiveness of social stories, the Child Sleep Habits Questionnaire and the Child Behavior Checklist were used in two papers each, and were the most commonly used. As non-standardized assessment tools, each of the four papers used turbulence and sleep diaries as assessment tools.

Conclusion : The effect of social story mediation can be divided into sleep quality and sleep-related behavior. In terms of sleep quality, studies showing improvements in night wakings, sleep onset delay, and sleep anxiety accounted for a large proportion of the sample. The detailed effect area of sleep quality showed a significant improvement after the interventions in most studies, and in all six studies analyzed in the present study, the continuation of the effect after the intervention was confirmed via follow-up tests. Thus, the findings of this study are expected to be helpful when applying social stories in children with sleep disorders in clinical practice due to presenting the intervention effects, outcome evaluation tools, and intervention periods in children with sleep disorders in prior investigations involving social stories.
KEYWORD
Sleep, Sleep disorders, Social story, Systematic review
FullTexts / Linksout information
 
Listed journal information