现役
创伤后应激
精神科
焦虑症
军事人员
睡眠障碍
随机对照试验
睡眠(系统调用)
心理学
试点试验
医学
临床心理学
共病
焦虑
内科学
失眠症
法学
操作系统
计算机科学
政治学
作者
Daniel J. Taylor,Kristi E. Pruiksma,Jim Mintz,Danica C. Slavish,Sophie Wardle‐Pinkston,Jessica R. Dietch,Katherine A. Dondanville,Stacey Young‐McCaughan,Karin L. Nicholson,Brett T. Litz,Terence M. Keane,Alan L. Peterson,Patricia A. Resick
摘要
Abstract Insomnia and nightmares are common in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). They are associated with worse psychological and physical health and worse PTSD treatment outcomes. In addition, they are resistant to PTSD treatments, which do not typically address sleep disorders. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and nightmares (CBT‐I&N) and cognitive processing therapy (CPT) for PTSD are first‐line treatments, but limited evidence exists guiding the treatment of individuals with all three disorders. The current study randomized U.S. military personnel ( N = 93) to one of three conditions: CBT‐I&N delivered before CPT, CBT‐I&N delivered after CPT, or CPT alone; all groups received 18 sessions. Across groups, participants demonstrated significantly improved PTSD symptoms. Because the study was terminated prematurely due to challenges with recruitment and retention, it was underpowered to answer the initially intended research questions. Nonetheless, statistical findings and relevant clinically meaningful changes were observed. Compared to participants who received CPT alone, those who received CBT‐I&N and CPT, regardless of sequencing, demonstrated larger improvements in PTSD symptoms, d = −0.36; insomnia, d = −0.77; sleep efficiency, d = 0.62; and nightmares, d = −.53. Compared to participants who received CBT‐I&N delivered before CPT, those who received CBT‐I&N delivered after CPT demonstrated larger improvements in PTSD symptoms, d = 0.48, and sleep efficiency, d = −0.44. This pilot study suggests that treating comorbid insomnia, nightmares, and PTSD symptoms results in clinically meaningful advantages in improvement for all three concerns compared to treating PTSD alone.
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