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Better Sleep in Psychiatric Care - Depression, Anxiety and PTSD
Sponsor: Karolinska Institutet
Summary
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is treatment of choice for insomnia. Many patients in psychiatric care have sleep problems including insomnia, but are rarely given the choice to participate in CBT to improve their sleep. Patients with PTSD, Anxiety disorders and Depression display high levels of sleep difficulties. Sleep problems are often general, such as insomnia and sleep phase problems. In a previous pilot study, the investigators of the current study developed a CBT protocol that would target sleep problems in this mixed psychiatric population. The basis was CBT for insomnia (CBT-i), but also including techniques that would alleviate sleep phase problems (e.g. the systematic use of light and darkness), and techniques to target more general sleep related problems (e.g. difficulties waking up in the morning), that are also common in psychiatric patients. This treatment was well tolerated and gave large withing-group effects on insomnia severity in the pilot study. In a naturalistic randomized controlled trial, the investigators now evaluate the effects of this psychological treatment on sleep and anxiety and depressive symptoms in patients at the units for Anxiety and Affective disorders and Trauma, Southwest Psychiatry and Northern Stockholm Psychiatry, Stockholm County Council, Sweden.
Official title: Better Sleep in Psychiatric Care - Depression, Anxiety and PTSD. A Randomized Naturalistic Study of a Psychological Group Treatment for Sleep Problems in Psychiatric Patients With Depression, Anxiety and PTSD.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
130
Start Date
2019-09-25
Completion Date
2025-06
Last Updated
2024-08-12
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Adjusted group CBT-i for Depression, Anxiety and PTSD
Adjusted group CBT-i for Depression, Anxiety and PTSD. CBT-i includes sleep scheduling/sleep compression, stimulus control, relaxation, cognitive interventions and sleep hygiene advice. Adjustments include the relationship between sleep and the psychiatric conditions at hand and and working with motivational enhancement techniques to increase adherence to treatment.
Care as usual wait-list control group
Usual care at the clinic. This entails managing pharmacological treatment for the psychiatric problems and/or sleep problems. The clinic also provides different group treatments, such as mindfulness groups and CBT groups for symptoms of worry and depression, and individual therapy.
Locations (1)
Program for Affective disorders, Anxiety and Trauma, Stockholm Southwest Psychiatry
Stockholm, Sweden