随机对照试验
催眠药
失眠的认知行为疗法
药方
认知
医学
睡眠开始
精神科
认知行为疗法
临床心理学
睡眠障碍
失眠症
内科学
药理学
作者
Isabelle Tully,Jane Kim,Norah Simpson,Latha Palaniappan,Joshua Tutek,Nicole B. Gumport,Jessica R. Dietch,Rachel Manber
出处
期刊:Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine
[American Academy of Sleep Medicine]
日期:2023-07-01
卷期号:19 (7): 1247-1257
被引量:1
摘要
To examine beliefs about prescription sleep medications (hypnotics) among individuals with insomnia disorder seeking cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and predictors of wishing to reduce use.Baseline data was collected from 245 adults 50 years and older enrolled in the "RCT of the Effectiveness of Stepped-Care Sleep Therapy in General Practice" study. T-tests compared characteristics of prescription sleep medication users with those of nonusers. Linear regression assessed predictors of patients' beliefs about sleep medication necessity and hypnotic-related concerns. Among users, we examined predictors of wishing to reduce sleep medications, including perceived hypnotic dependence, beliefs about medications, and demographic characteristics.Users endorsed stronger beliefs about the necessity of sleep medications and less concern about potential harms than nonusers (P < .01). Stronger dysfunctional sleep-related cognitions predicted greater beliefs about necessity and concern about use (P < .01). Patients wishing to reduce sleep medications reported greater perceived hypnotic dependence than those disinterested in reduction (P < .001). Self-reported dependence severity was the strongest predictor of wishing to reduce use (P = .002).Despite expressing strong beliefs about necessity, and comparatively less concern about taking sleep medications, three-quarters of users wished to reduce prescription hypnotics. Results may not generalize to individuals with insomnia not seeking nonpharmacological treatments. Upon completion, the "RCT of the Effectiveness of Stepped-Care Sleep Therapy in General Practice" study will provide information about the extent to which therapist-led and digital cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia contribute to prescription hypnotic reduction.Registry: ClinicalTrials.gov; Name: The RESTING Insomnia Study: Randomized Controlled Study on Effectiveness of Stepped-Care Sleep Therapy (RESTING); URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03532282; Identifier: NCT03532282.Tully IA, Kim JP, Simpson N, et al. Beliefs about prescription sleep medications and interest in reducing hypnotic use: an examination of middle-aged and older adults with insomnia disorder. J Clin Sleep Med. 2023;19(7):1247-1257.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI