Improving Patients’ Sleep in an Acute Mental Health Ward Using Non-Pharmacological Interventions
Theodoros Mavrogiannidis, Ghada Alshehabi, Alessandro Malfatto

TL;DR
This study aimed to improve sleep quality for patients in a mental health ward using non-drug methods like earplugs and sleep education.
Contribution
The study introduces a practical, non-pharmacological approach to enhance sleep quality in acute mental health settings.
Findings
Patients reported a median sleep rating increase from 6 to 7 after interventions.
Most patients found sleep hygiene tips useful and used earplugs to reduce noise disturbance.
A small number of patients used a white noise app, but most relied on other interventions.
Abstract
Aims: Interruption of sleep-wake behavioural patterns and circadian rhythms has been associated with the development and worsening of a range of mental health disorders, including depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia, and specific high-risk outcomes such as aggression and suicidality. In full knowledge of the above, we aimed to improve patients’ self-reported sleep quality in an acute male ward, by 20% by the end of January 2025. Methods: An initial survey was conducted for patients to rate their sleep quality on a Numeric Rating Scale (1–10, where 1 = a worst night sleep and 10 = a best night sleep). This survey included close- and open-ended questions for patients to identify perceived barriers to good sleep. Responses were collected over one week from all consenting patients on the ward (10/18 patients). Insights from the survey were used to design targeted interventions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Sleep and Wakefulness Research
