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July 14, 1999


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Stanford group therapy program aims to put insomniacs to sleep

BY MITCH LESLIE

For the 30 percent of the population who have trouble falling or remaining asleep, nightfall has come to signify the enemy. As the culprit descends, anxiety mounts, making the nightly struggle to sleep even harder.

Though insomnia is the most common sleep disorder, general medical practices and even sleep clinics rarely provide appropriate treatment, according to Derek Loewy, PhD, co-director of the Insomnia Program at the Stanford Sleep Disorders Clinic.

Answering the need for better diagnosis and treatment, Loewy and his colleague Rachel Manber, PhD, have launched the first group therapy program for insomnia in the United States. The eight-week, outpatient program combines education to instill healthy sleep habits with counseling sessions that help patients exorcise negative attitudes about sleep.

Though more common among the elderly, insomnia strikes people of all ages. Its symptoms include difficulty falling asleep, frequent awakening during the night, or awakening too early in the morning. The typical insomniac has sought help repeatedly and unsuccessfully, Loewy said. "Our insomniacs tend to be those with the thickest medical charts," he said.

Loewy said the first step in the treatment involves a thorough examination to rule out other possible causes for the patient's sleeplessness, such as depression or other sleep disorders.

Meeting once a week in groups of 5 to 7, patients then begin what is called cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), which involves adjusting behaviors to promote sleep and to alter the patients' misconceptions about their sleep problem, Lowey said. This can be difficult, because behaviors that disrupt sleep are surprisingly common and often seem sensible. For instance, to compensate for sleep loss or to remain awake after a restless night, many bleary-eyed insomniacs try napping, sleeping late and using caffeine or other stimulants during the day. At night, some people attempt to sedate themselves with alcohol.

All of these measures are counterproductive because they distort the body's sleep-wake cycle, Lowey said.

One of the most common misconceptions is that insomnia can be beaten through sheer determination, by stubbornly remaining in bed until you doze off. Lying awake is one of the worst things you can do, Loewy said. Failure to sleep breeds frustration and actually promotes further sleeplessness.

Instead, Lowey counsels, if you don't fall asleep quickly, get out of bed and do something relaxing and enjoyable. Reading, knitting and other quiet activities fit the bill. During these times, avoid exercise or exposure to bright light, since both can trigger arousal, he said.

Loewy and Manber also stress positive actions that can improve sleep, such as having set times for waking up and going to bed, something that helps the body's sleep-wake cycle settle into a regular rhythm.

During the trickier part of the treatment, Loewy and Manber try to get patients to talk through some of the worries that often trouble insomniacs. For some, their inability to sleep becomes so frustrating that they unconsciously develop negative associations with their own bed ­ this explains why insomniacs typically sleep better away from home. For most people, "the sight of your bed should not be a source of anxiety," Loewy said.

Loewy and Manber encourage patients not to worry around bedtime, but to carve out a "worry time" during the day for fretting. They also teach breathing exercises that promote relaxation, and help patients deal with the sleep deficit that results when they begin adhering to a set wake-up time.

Unlike some past insomnia treatments, the program shuns drugs. Though sedatives can induce sleep, they lose their effectiveness as the body develops tolerance, and addiction remains a possibility, Loewy said.

The approach used at Stanford draws on Scottish research and work published in the March 17 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. That study, conducted by scientists in Virginia and Canada, found that drug therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy and a combination of the two alleviated insomnia in the short term. But two years after treatment ended, only the CBT patients reported that the improvement in their sleep had persisted.

For more information on the insomnia treatment program, call 724-0181. SR