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Colleen E. Carney, Daniel J. Buysse, Sonia Ancoli-Israel, Jack D. Edinger, Andrew D. Krystal, Kenneth L. Lichstein, Charles M. Morin, The Consensus Sleep Diary: Standardizing Prospective Sleep Self-Monitoring, Sleep, Volume 35, Issue 2, 1 February 2012, Pages 287–302, https://doi.org/10.5665/sleep.1642
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Abstract
To present an expert consensus, standardized, patient-informed sleep diary.
Sleep diaries from the original expert panel of 25 attendees of the Pittsburgh Assessment Conference1 were collected and reviewed. A smaller subset of experts formed a committee and reviewed the compiled diaries. Items deemed essential were included in a Core sleep diary, and those deemed optional were retained for an expanded diary. Secondly, optional items would be available in other versions. A draft of the Core and optional versions along with a feedback questionnaire were sent to members of the Pittsburgh Assessment Conference. The feedback from the group was integrated and the diary drafts were subjected to 6 focus groups composed of good sleepers, people with insomnia, and people with sleep apnea. The data were summarized into themes and changes to the drafts were made in response to the focus groups. The resultant draft was evaluated by another focus group and subjected to lexile analyses. The lexile analyses suggested that the Core diary instructions are at a sixth-grade reading level and the Core diary was written at a third-grade reading level.
The Consensus Sleep Diary was the result of collaborations with insomnia experts and potential users. The adoption of a standard sleep diary for insomnia will facilitate comparisons across studies and advance the field. The proposed diary is intended as a living document which still needs to be tested, refined, and validated.
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