Abstract
Introduction:
Sleep and mental health problems are common across the working adult population. This process evaluation provides insight into the experiences of employees who took part in a digital intervention trial: Supporting Employees with Insomnia and Emotional Regulation Problems (SLEEP). The programme combined digital CBT for insomnia with emotion regulation. Digital content was supported by remote therapy. The objectives of this process evaluation were to explore participants' experiences of the intervention, and identify how the intervention achieved change.
Methods:
Twenty-one semi-structured interviews were conducted using videoconferencing. A stratified sample of participants from within each of five cohorts of the SLEEP trial was interviewed. Thematic analysis utilized a collaborative codebook and framework approach. To conceptualize mechanisms of change, behaviour change techniques were retrospectively coded onto participant interview data.
Results:
An overarching theme: ‘Better sleep, better wellbeing’ was generated, with three interlinking themes conceptualizing the process by which positive changes to sleep and wellbeing were achieved. These were: ‘Procedure: The value of therapy sessions versus digital-only’, ‘Context: Working on mental health from home during COVID-19’, and ‘Mechanisms: Practice, feedback and problem solving.’
Conclusions:
Participants' experiences of SLEEP were predominantly positive and suggested a spillover effect of improved sleep on overall wellbeing. Triangulation of quantitative outcomes showed congruent improvements. Maintaining therapist contact to facilitate behaviour change throughout the programme was important. Furthermore, providing a private space for therapist calls was essential to facilitate the intervention in the workplace; an important insight for the development of digital mental health interventions intended for the workplace.
Sleep and mental health problems are common across the working adult population. This process evaluation provides insight into the experiences of employees who took part in a digital intervention trial: Supporting Employees with Insomnia and Emotional Regulation Problems (SLEEP). The programme combined digital CBT for insomnia with emotion regulation. Digital content was supported by remote therapy. The objectives of this process evaluation were to explore participants' experiences of the intervention, and identify how the intervention achieved change.
Methods:
Twenty-one semi-structured interviews were conducted using videoconferencing. A stratified sample of participants from within each of five cohorts of the SLEEP trial was interviewed. Thematic analysis utilized a collaborative codebook and framework approach. To conceptualize mechanisms of change, behaviour change techniques were retrospectively coded onto participant interview data.
Results:
An overarching theme: ‘Better sleep, better wellbeing’ was generated, with three interlinking themes conceptualizing the process by which positive changes to sleep and wellbeing were achieved. These were: ‘Procedure: The value of therapy sessions versus digital-only’, ‘Context: Working on mental health from home during COVID-19’, and ‘Mechanisms: Practice, feedback and problem solving.’
Conclusions:
Participants' experiences of SLEEP were predominantly positive and suggested a spillover effect of improved sleep on overall wellbeing. Triangulation of quantitative outcomes showed congruent improvements. Maintaining therapist contact to facilitate behaviour change throughout the programme was important. Furthermore, providing a private space for therapist calls was essential to facilitate the intervention in the workplace; an important insight for the development of digital mental health interventions intended for the workplace.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e70041 |
| Number of pages | 20 |
| Journal | British Journal of Health Psychology |
| Volume | 31 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 4 Dec 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2025 The Author(s). British Journal of Health Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.