“A ruffled mind makes a restless pillow.” Charlotte Bronte
In our self-obsessed culture, monitoring and tracking heartbeat, steps, exercise, food intake, and sleep is commonplace. My sister has recently been tracking her sleep using an app on her smartphone, and she encouraged me to do it too. My first response was, “Why? I know I’m sleep deprived. Why do I need an app to tell me that?” I was still nursing my baby once a night at the time and I was pretty positive this was negatively impacting my sleep and my ability to function in general.
Skeptical, I downloaded the app and started it each night before bed for about a week. The application’s primary measure of sleep quality is called ‘sleep efficiency,’ which is the amount of time you are asleep divided by the amount of time you are in bed and is represented as a percentage. This is the same measure of progress I use with clients in cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). Typically, sleep efficiency of 85% or higher is considered “normal,” “healthy,” and “good” sleep. For example, if you are in bed for 8 hours, asleep for 7.5 of those hours, with 20 minutes to fall asleep and two episodes of waking for 5 minutes each, your sleep efficiency is 94%.
I was somewhat surprised at what the app told me. Many of nights I was sure my sleep was poor, “I didn’t sleep a wink last night,” the app indicated that, while I was awake for some of the time (feeding my baby), I was out like a light during the time I was in bed. A user-friendly graph depicted the movement associated with my sleep and decent average sleep efficiency. I learned from a week of monitoring that I should prioritize getting to bed earlier because when I am in bed, I’m sleeping. While I am not suffering from insomnia, the little experiment reminded me of the benefits of brief self-monitoring and inspired me to share some information about insomnia and its treatment.
Most people have bouts of insomnia at some point in their lives, usually in response to a stressful event. These short episodes of sleeplessness usually resolve and don’t require treatment. Chronic insomnia lasts for months or years and can be characterized by:
Consequences of insomnia include fatigue, sleepiness, difficulty with thinking (attention, concentration, memory), irritability, headaches, poor work performance, and persistent worry about sleep.
Insomnia develops as a result of three factors: predisposing factors, precipitating factors, and perpetuating factors. Predisposing factors are risk factors for developing insomnia, such as a highly sensitive biological sleep system or a tendency toward high arousal. Precipitating events are usually stressful events that result in an initial loss of sleep; for example, the loss of a loved one, a stressful move, a new job, etc. Most people recover from this initial sleep loss once the stressor resolves.
But the perpetuating factors play one of the biggest roles in the development and maintenance of insomnia. Some people become highly focused on their sleep difficulty, which results in heightened anxiety, maladaptive behavioral responses (going to bed early, staying in bed late, avoiding evening activities for fear that it may interfere with sleep, developing sleep rituals, or “crutches”), and unhelpful thoughts, attitudes, and beliefs about the sleep problem.
Some examples of these common dysfunctional beliefs are:
“I need 8 hours of sleep to feel refreshed and function well during the day.”
“When I sleep poorly on one night, I know that it will disturb my sleep schedule for the whole week.”
“Medication is probably the only solution to sleeplessness.”
These beliefs tend to perpetuate insomnia by further increasing worry and arousal, focusing attention on the negative consequences of lost sleep, and decreasing belief in your ability to control your sleep problem. These patterns of thinking, in addition to the well-intentioned but detrimental behavioral responses to sleep loss, are the critical targets of CBT for insomnia.
Many people believe that medication is the only answer to chronic insomnia. However, CBT for insomnia (CBT-I) is safe, brief (usually 4-5 sessions), has lasting effects, and is well-researched. CBT-I is composed of education about sleep, stimulus control strategies, sleep restriction, relaxation training, and “sleep hygiene.”
Stimulus control strategies address the issue of the bed and sleeping environment becoming associated with wakefulness, rather than sleep. In a nutshell, the recommendations go something like this:
Simply put, implementing stimulus control strategies is not fun. Getting out of bed when not sleeping is annoying and takes work. Also, many people with insomnia have the unfounded belief that if they just stay in bed and “rest,” they will increase their likelihood of falling asleep and will at least get some R&R. In reality, more time spent in bed awake will only perpetuate insomnia, and rest is not equal to sleep.
Occasionally, a strategy called sleep restriction is used. This involves restricting the amount of time in bed. The time is limited to the amount of sleep the person typically needs to feel rested. This process can also be unpleasant as it results in an initial loss of additional sleep. However, after a few days, most people begin to see results.
Relaxation training can help to address the increased anxiety and arousal associated with insomnia and the process of sleep. Learning breathing and muscle relation techniques such as progressive muscle relaxation can be important targets for the management of insomnia. Bothersome thoughts and worries are often a major component of insomnia. If this is the case, taking time out of the day to focus on worries and write them down can be helpful.
Sleep hygiene recommendations are a beneficial add-on to the treatment of insomnia (but are not usually sufficient treatment) and are applicable to most “normal” sleepers. The following are some of the guidelines I’ve found to be the most powerful:
Using electronic devices around and up to bedtime and in bed is becoming more ubiquitous. It is also commonly associated with poor sleep outcomes. Using a cell phone, tablet, computer, etc so close to bedtime can be problematic for a couple of reasons, listed below:
Remember, if you do not have a sleep problem and “problematic” sleep hygiene-related behaviors are not affecting your sleep in a negative way, don’t worry about it! But these behaviors can be important aspects to consider for those who are suffering from a long-term sleep problem.
There are good self-help resources for insomnia both online and in book form. We recommend The Centre for Clinical Interventions (CCI) for its solid information sheets. We also recommend the book, Quiet Your Mind and Get to Sleep. It can sometimes be difficult to find a CBT-I provider. However, the Society of Behavioral Sleep Foundation website: www.behavioralsleep.org has a list of providers.
If you are experiencing insomnia along with an eating disorder, we can help. If you are experiencing Night Eating Syndrome, a disorder in which sleep is disrupted and you are eating late into the night, we can help. Contact us here.
Carney, C., & Manber, R. (2009). Quiet Your Mind and Get to Sleep. New Harbinger Publications.
Morin CM; Vallières A; Ivers H. Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitudes about Sleep (DBAS): Validation of a Brief Version (DBAS-16). SLEEP 2007;30(11):1547-1554.
Spielman AJ, Caruso L, Glovinsky P. A behavioral perspective on insomnia. Psych Clin N Am 1987; 10: 541±553.
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