The effect of electro-magnetic-energy-regulation therapy on subjective sleep among elite players in Norwegian women's football
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35574Dato
2024-08-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The current study investigated if Bio-Electro-Magnetic-Energy-Regulation
(BEMER) therapy is affecting subjective sleep among a sample of 21 elite female
football players in a Norwegian top series club. Subjective sleep was measured
each day over a period of 273 consecutive days by using a smartphone
application, PM Reporter Pro, which scheduled push messages to remind the
participants to report sleep every morning. The study was conducted as a
quasi-experimental design, with a control period before the introduction of
BEMER therapy that lasted for 3 months, followed by an intervention period
where BEMER therapy was used that lasted for 5 months. The collected data
from the players in the control period served as their control compared to the
data collected from the players in the intervention period. Analyses of variance
(ANOVA) with False Discovery Rate adjusted p-values show that subjective sleep
duration and subjective sleep quality are significantly reduced on game nights,
both in the control period and in the experiment period. The results also show
that subjective sleep duration and subjective sleep quality significantly increase
in the experiment period compared to the control period. The findings indicate
that BEMER therapy might serve as a tool to improve sleep.
Forlag
Frontiers MediaSitering
Moen F, Pettersen SA and Mosleth EF (2024) The effect of electro-magnetic-energy-regulation therapy on subjective sleep among elite players in Norwegian women’s football. Front. Sports Act. Living 6:1343841Metadata
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