杏吧视频 researcher studying how simple tools and practices to improve sleep may help young adults with Type 1 diabetes control their blood sugar
A 杏吧视频 nurse-scientist is studying the critical role that regular restful sleep may play in better controlling Type 1 diabetes for young adults living on their own for the first time.

鈥淲e know that sleep is important for all of us, of course, but we believe that this group of young adults is unique for this study and we believe that we can help,鈥 said Stephanie Griggs, an assistant professor at the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, who is leading the research. 鈥淢any people think that sleep just happens to you, but in reality, it takes effort to have healthy sleep. This is even more critical when you have a lifelong health issue.鈥
Type 1 diabetes is a chronic (lifelong) health condition for which there is no cure and is .
Type 1 diabetes is believed to be caused by an autoimmune reaction (the body attacks itself) that stops a person鈥檚 pancreas from making insulin鈥攚hich allows glucose to enter the body's cells to provide energy. This type of diabetes affects about 1.6 million people nationally鈥攁nd is projected to increase to 5 million by 2050.
Type 1 is more often diagnosed in childhood or earlier than its counterpart, Type 2 diabetes, which is usually diagnosed in adults over 40 and linked more directly to weight, inactivity and age.
Griggs and colleagues will equip a group of young adults with Type 1 diabetes and other criteria with several simple, but critical, methods to help get restful sleep.
The health benefits of sleep are well documented, Griggs said: It restores the mind and body, repairs blood vessels and regulates blood sugar鈥攃ritical for a person with diabetes.
The work is supported by a three-year, $728,912 grant from the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The funding is from the NINR鈥檚 Pathway to Independence program, which provides support for nurse scientists, especially in areas that 鈥減romote and improve the health of individuals, families, and communities.鈥
鈥淭his is a highly competitive NIH award geared toward launching research careers for the most promising early career faculty,鈥 said Ronald Hickman Jr., associate dean for research and the Ruth M. Anderson Professor of Nursing. Hickman said Griggs is believed to be the first recipient from the nursing school.
Hickman, who is also a collaborator on the project, added that Griggs鈥 exploration of the interplay between sleep and diabetes self-management is 鈥渋nnovative and has potential to significantly impact the health and well-being of an often overlooked group of Americans, young adults living with Type I diabetes.鈥
Griggs and her team will enroll 48 participants for the study鈥攁ll now living on their own for the first time and diagnosed with having Type 1 diabetes for at least six months.
The new study will begin with what Griggs calls 鈥渕otivational interviewing鈥 to assist young adults in setting personal sleep goals, whose sleep patterns will be monitored by the researchers over three months.
The study will also recommend that the participants create a cool, dark atmosphere for sleeping and consider the addition of sleep-promoting activities like guided imagery, progressive muscle relaxation and breathing exercises. Researchers will recommend that participants limit 鈥渂lue-light鈥 devices like cell phones at night and avoid caffeine consumption late in the day.
鈥淲e often focus on diet and exercise for managing diabetes for people of all ages, which is very important, but sleep is a neglected topic,鈥 said Griggs, who specializes in the role of sleep and the circadian system in chronic childhood conditions.
She said her previous research led her to consider studying and helping people who must self-manage their diabetes. 鈥淲hen I first began to talk to young people with Type 1 diabetes about this,鈥 she said, 鈥渕any would say 鈥楴obody has ever asked me about sleep,鈥 and that was eye opening.鈥
She said young adults with Type 1 diabetes achieve blood-sugar targets at the lowest rate and have unique needs to maintain their health.
鈥淭here may be a number of reasons for this,鈥 Griggs said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e away from parents or the home they grew up in, for the first time; some may no longer have health insurance or high out-of-pocket costs; and some may be struggling with just the weight of a lifelong effort to manage their diabetes.
鈥淭his is a 24/7 condition that they didn鈥檛 ask for, and as one of the participants in my research said: 鈥業 have my whole life to have diabetes鈥攂ut I鈥檓 only in college once.鈥 鈥
Others involved in the work are Hickman and and University Hospitals.
For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu.
This article was originally published Sept. 22, 2021.