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불면증의 인지행동치료open accessCognitive Behavioral Therapy of Insomnia

Other Titles
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy of Insomnia
Authors
장창현김석현오동훈
Issue Date
Nov-2013
Publisher
한양대학교 의과대학
Keywords
Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders; Cognitive Therapy; Sleep Disorders
Citation
Hanyang Medical Reviews, v.33, no.4, pp.210 - 215
Journal Title
Hanyang Medical Reviews
Volume
33
Number
4
Start Page
210
End Page
215
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/161482
DOI
10.7599/hmr.2013.33.4.210
ISSN
1738-429X
Abstract
Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is a group of strategies which includes sleep restriction, stimulus control therapy, relaxation training, cognitive therapy, and various combinations of those methods. Growing evidence from controlled clinical trials indicates that the majority of patients (70 to 80%) with persistent insomnia respond to CBT, and approximately half of them achieve clinical remission. CBT-I produces significant improvements of sleep-onset latency, wake after sleep onset, sleep efficiency, and sleep quality. These benefits are paralleled by reductions of daytime fatigue, improvement in psychological symptoms, and decreased usage of hypnotics. Changes in sleep patterns are well maintained after completing therapy. Treatment outcomes have been documented primarily with prospective sleep diaries; studies using polysomnography and actigraphy have also supported these results. Considering the results of current peer-reviewed research, CBT-I should be the first-line therapy for persistent insomnia. Despite strong evidence supporting its efficacy and effectiveness, CBT-I remains under utilized by health care practitioners. Increased application of evidence-based CBT-I therapies and their extension into primary medical practices should be highly effective and should be recommended in the future for better clinical management of insomnia-related disorders.
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COLLEGE OF MEDICINE (DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY)
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