Read Insomnia and Anxiety (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders) Online
Authors: Jack D. Edinger Colleen E. Carney
would do when awake should not be done in your bed/bedroom. Sex can be an
exception to this rule.
• Challenging the negative thought distress connection by completing a Thought
Record.
• Complete a Behavioral Experiment that challenges whether a safety behavior is
helpful in the long term.
• If anxiety is a significant problem, enact your anxiety management strategies
during the day to reduce the likelihood that they will be an issue at night.
– If the anxiety is specific to sleep, use Thought Records throughout the day to
interrupt the negative thought–emotion cycle and use Constructive Worry in
the evening.
– Consider starting a daily relaxation practice particularly if it has been helpful
in the past.
References
121
• Maintain healthy sleep behaviors such as refraining from caffeine, alcohol, or
tobacco consumption within hours of bedtime.
If I have enacted all of these strategies and continue to have problems, I will
contact my health provider and schedule a refresher session.
If I notice new sleep-related symptoms, I will contact my health provider and
schedule an appointment. Such symptoms can include:
– Loud snoring
– Stopping breathing, breathing pauses, gasping or snorting during sleep
– Falling asleep unintentionally during the day
– A creepy-crawly sensation in your lower legs in the evening accompanied by an
irresistible urges to move your legs to alleviate the sensation
– Very frequent leg jerking during the night
– Other unusual new experiences
Remember, you mastered the insomnia before, and you will master it again.
References
Beck, J. S. (1995).
Cognitive therapy: Basics and beyond
. New York: Guilford Press.
Beck, J. S. (2005).
Cognitive
therapy for challenging problems: What to do when the basics don’t
work
. New York: Guilford Press.
Bennett-Levy, J., Westbrook, J., Fennell, M., Cooper, M., Rouf, K., & Hackmann, A. (2004).
Behavioural experiments: Historical and conceptual underpinnings. In J. Bennett-Levy, G.
Butler, M. Fennell, A. Hackman, M. Mueller, & D. Westbrook (Eds.),
Oxford guide to behav-
ioural experiments in cognitive therapy
(pp. 1–19). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bootzin, R. R. (1972).
Stimulus control treatment for insomnia. Proceedings of the 80th Annual
Meeting of the American Psychological Association, 7
, 395–396.
Carney, C. E., & Edinger, J. D. (2006). Identifying critical dysfunctional beliefs about sleep in
primary insomnia.
Sleep, 29
(4), 440–453.
Carney, C. E., & Manber, R. (2009).
Quiet Your Mind and Get to Sleep: Solutions to insomnia for
those with depression, anxiety or chronic pain
. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger.
Carney, C. E., & Waters, W. F. (2006). Effects of a structured problem-solving procedure on pre-sleep
cognitive arousal in college students with insomnia.
Behavioral Sleep Medicine, 4
(1), 13–28.
Davey, G. C. L. (1994). Pathological worrying as exascerbated problem-solving. In G. C. L. Davey
& F. Tallis (Eds.),
Worrying: Perspectives on theory, assessment and treatment
(pp. 35–59).
New York: John Wiley and Sons.
Edinger, J. D., & Carney, C. E. (2008).
Overcoming insomnia: A cognitive behavior therapy
approach therapist guide
. New York: Oxford University Press.
Edinger, J. D., Wohlgemuth, W. K., Radtke, R. A., Marsh, G. R., & Quillian, R. E. (2001).
Cognitive behavioral therapy for treatment of chronic primary insomnia: A randomized con-
trolled trial.
The Journal of the American Medical Association, 285
, 1856–1864.
Espie, C., Broomfield, N., MacMahon, K., Macphee, L., & Taylor, L. M. (2006). The attention-
intention-effort pathway in the development of psychophysiologic insomnia: A theoretical
review.
Sleep Medicine Reviews, 10
(4), 215–245.
Espie, C. A., & Lindsay, W. R. (1987). Cognitive strategies for the management of severe sleep
maintenance insomnia: A preliminary investigation.
Behavioral Psychotherapy, 15
, 388–395.
Fichten, C. S., Libman, E., Creti, L., Amsel, R., Tagalakis, V., & Brender, W. (1998). Thoughts
during awake times in older good and poor sleepers-The self-statement test:60+.
Cognitive
Therapy and Research, 22
(1), 1–20.
122
8 Cognitive Strategies for Managing Anxiety and Insomnia
Francis, M. E., & Pennebaker, J. W. (1992). Putting stress into words: The impact of writing on
physiological, absentee, and self-reported emotional well-being measures.
American Journal
of Health Promotion, 6
, 280–287.
Greenberger, D., & Padesky, C. A. (1995).
Mind over mood
. New York: The Guilford Press.
Gross, R., & Borkovec, T. (1982). Effects of cognitive intrusion manipulation on the sleep onset
latency of good sleepers.
Behaviour Therapy, 13
, 112–116.
Hall, M., Buysse, D. J., Reynolds, C. F., Kupfer, D. J., & Baum, A. (1996). Stress-related intrusive
thoughts disrupt sleep onset and contiguity.
Sleep Research, 25
, 163.
Harvey, A. G. (2000). Pre-sleep cognitive activity: A comparison of sleep-onset insomniacs and
good sleepers.
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 39
, 275–286.
Harvey, A. G. (2002). A cognitive model of insomnia.
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 40
,
869–893.
Harvey, A. G., & Farrell, C. (2003). The efficacy of a Pennebaker-like writing intervention for
poor sleepers.
Behavioral Sleep Medicine, 1
(2), 115–123.
Harvey, A. G., & Greenall, E. (2003). Catastrophic worry in primary insomnia.
Journal of
Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 34
, 11–23.
Harvey, A. G., Sharpley, A. L., Ree, M. J., Stinson, K., & Clark, D. M. (2007). An open trial of
cognitive therapy for chronic insomnia.
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45
(10), 2491–2501.
Harvey, A. G., Tang, N. K. Y., & Browning, L. (2005). Cognitive approaches to insomnia.
Clinical
Psychology Review, 25
, 593–611.
Lichstein, K. L., & Johnson, R. S. (1993). Relaxation for insomnia and hypnotic medication use
in older women.
Psychology and Aging, 8
, 103–111.
Morin, C. M. (1993).
Insomnia: Psychological assessment and management
. New York: Guilford
Press.
Morin, C. M., Vallières, A., Guay, B., Ivers, H., Savard, J., & Mérette, C. (2009). Cognitive behav-
ioral therapy, singly and combined with medication, for persistent insomnia: A randomized
controlled trial.
The Journal of the American Medical Association, 301
(19), 2005–2015.
Pennebaker, J. W., Kiecolt-Glaser, J., & Glaser, R. (1988). Disclosure of traumas and immune
function: Health implicaitons for psychotherapy.
Journal of Consulting and Clinical
Psychology, 56
, 239–245.
Platt, J. J., & Spivack, G. (1975). Unidimensionality of the Means-End Problem-Solving (MEPS)
procedure.
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 31
, 15–16.
Ree, M. J., & Harvey, A. G. (2004a). Insomnia. In J. Bennett-Levy, G. Butler, M. Fennell, A.
Hackman, M. Mueller, & D. Westbrook (Eds.),
Oxford guide to behavioural experiments in
cognitive therapy
(pp. 287–305). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Ree, M. J., & Harvey, A. G. (2004b). Insomnia: The development of the Sleep-related Behaviours
Questionnaire (SRBQ).
Behaviour Change, 21
(1), 26–36.
Salkovskis, P. M., Clark, D. M., Hackmann, A., Wells, A., & Gelder, M. G. (1999). An experi-
mental investigation of the role of safety-seeking behaviours in the maintenance of panic
disorder with agoraphobia.
Behavior Research and Therapy, 37
(6), 559–574.
Tang, N. K. Y., & Harvey, A. G. (2006). Altering misperception of sleep in insomnia: Behavioral experi-
ment versus verbal feedback.
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 74
(4), 767–776.
Tang, N. K. Y., Schmidt, D. A., & Harvey, A. G. (2006). Sleeping with the enemy: Clock monitor-
ing in the maintenance of insomnia.
Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry,
38
(1), 40–55.
Wells, A., Clark, D. M., Salkovskis, P., Ludgate, J., Hackmann, A., & Gelder, M. (1995). Social
phobia: The role of in-situation safety behaviors in maintaining anxiety and negative beliefs.
Behavior Therapy, 26
(1), 153–161.
Wicklow, A., & Espie, C. A. (2000). Intrusive thoughts and their relationship to actigraphic mea-
surement of sleep: Towards a cognitive model of insomnia.
Behaviour Research and Therapy,
38
, 679–693.
Woodley, J., & Smith, S. (2006). Safety behaviors and dysfunctional beliefs about sleep: Testing
a cognitive model of the maintenance of insomnia.
Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 60
(6),
551–557.
Chapter 9
Other Issues in Managing the Sleep of Those
with Anxiety
Abstract
We have presented the core treatment strategies of CBT for insomnia
in the previous chapters, but there are potential challenges unique to those suffer-
ing from comorbid anxiety problems that should be discussed. Herein, we present
specific instructions/protocols for managing sleep problems in the context of
anxiety and anxiety disorders, including relaxation-based strategies (focusing
specifically on Progressive Muscle Relaxation), Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of
Nocturnal Panic (Craske et al., Behavior Therapy 36:43–54, 2005), treating claus-
trophobia for those using CPAP for sleep apnea, and dream/nightmare rescripting.
While a major goal of this text is that of providing practitioners guidance in the
use of psychological strategies for the management of sleep problems with anxiety
as a prominent feature, the problems discussed may represent only a subset of the
varied forms of sleep disturbances that may present as primary or comorbid sleep
disorders. Many people with such conditions require and benefit from one or more
consultations with a sleep specialist. Hence, we provide discussion and a resource
for use in determining whether the type of sleep problem and circumstances
warrant a sleep specialty referral.
Relaxation-Based Strategies
Since cognitive and physiological arousal is a hallmark symptom of anxiety disorders
in general, psychological treatments designed to reduce arousal have long been popu-
lar for the management of such conditions. In fact, as early as the 1930s, Jacobson
noted the usefulness of a structured progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) exercise for
reducing arousal symptoms. During the latter half of the twentieth century, various
forms of relaxation therapies evolved from Jacobson’s early observations and became
popular for managing the arousal symptoms in the various anxiety disorders. Meta-
analytic studies and systematic reviews have generally supported their efficacy for
C.E. Carney and J.D. Edinger,
Insomnia and Anxiety
, Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders, 123
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4419-1434-7_9, © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010
124
9 Other Issues in Managing the Sleep of Those with Anxiety
anxiety management. These reports have indicated that the relaxation therapies are
effective as either stand-alone treatments or adjunctive measures for the management
of conditions such as generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety, and
phobic conditions (Clum, Clum, & Surls, 1993; Futterman & Shapiro, 1986; Jorm
et al., 2004; Norton & Price, 2007; Siev & Chambless, 2007; Stetter & Kupper, 2002).
Thus, relaxation therapy has become a staple one among the psychological treatments
offered to those with anxiety problems.
As noted in Chap. 2, cognitive and physiological arousal (resulting from
behavioral conditioning), tendencies to worry in bed, and sleep-related perfor-
mance anxiety all are well-recognized perpetuating mechanisms for chronic
insomnia. Consequently, relaxation therapies would seem an obvious treatment
choice for insomnia management. In fact, relaxation approaches were among the
first behavioral treatments applied to insomnia problems. Initially, there was suc-
cess in treating someone with sleep-onset insomnia using a form of relaxation
therapy known as autogenic training (Schultz & Luthe, 1959). A few years later,
there were similar results in an insomnia case treated with progressive muscle
relaxation training (Jacobson, 1964). However, not until the early 1970s were the
first randomized clinical trials conducted to document the efficacy of relaxation
approaches (Borkovec & Fowles, 1973; Nicassio & Bootzin, 1974). Nonetheless,
these early reports were sufficient to foster substantial research and clinical inter-
est in the use of relaxation therapies for insomnia treatment during the past sev-
eral decades.
Currently, there is sufficient evidence to conclude that relaxation training is