Read Insomnia and Anxiety (Series in Anxiety and Related Disorders) Online
Authors: Jack D. Edinger Colleen E. Carney
use and they have limited data supporting their efficacy either following prolonged
hypnotic usage or following treatment discontinuation. In contrast, CBT usually
has a slower rate of therapeutic action but has much more durable effects long after
active treatment (i.e., therapist contact) is discontinued. Therefore, the combination
of hypnotic medication with CBT might result in a more rapid treatment response
than seen with CBT alone and more durable treatment effects than when hypnotics
are used in isolation. As a consequence, such a treatment combination could prove
to be the “ideal” insomnia therapy.
Unfortunately, previous studies pertaining to CBT/hypnotic combination therapy
has provided somewhat mixed results. Three studies (Jacobs, Pace-Schott,
Stickgold, & Otto, 2004; Morin, Colecchi, Stone, Sood, & Brink, 1999; Wu,
Jinfeng, Chungai, & Chunling, 2006) with similar research designs compared treat-
ments consisting of CBT, hypnotic medication, a CBT + hypnotic treatment combi-
nation, and a placebo medication. In each of these studies, active treatment was
delivered for a fixed period of time (6–8 weeks) and then was discontinued during
an extended follow-up period. In each of these studies, those who received CBT
alone showed better long-term sleep improvements than did those who received the
other treatments including the combined CBT/medication therapy. Such results
imply that the presence of medication somehow dampens patients’ responses to
Sleep Medication Discontinuation Strategies
73
CBT perhaps because they rely on the medication effects rather than fully learning
and implementing the CBT strategies. However, more recent studies (Morin et al.,
2009; Vallieres, Morin, & Guay, 2005) have shown that a sequential treatment pro-
tocol, in which patients receive hypnotic medication during the initial stages of an
extended CBT protocol, produces better short- and long-term results than does a
treatment composed of CBT alone. Seemingly, this treatment combination does not
encourage as much dependence on medication and places greater emphasis on CBT
for longer-term insomnia improvements. Although more research of this nature is
needed, these findings suggest that a time-limited course of hypnotic medication at
the outset of CBT therapy may potentiate the treatment effects of this multimodal
behavioral intervention.
Sleep Medication Discontinuation Strategies
As noted earlier, many of those with hypnotic-dependence who present for psycho-
logical treatment of their insomnia have the immediate or long-term goal of being
able to break their dependence on medications for sleep. Those who typically
obtain satisfactory sleep on medications wish to maintain such patterns of medica-
tions, whereas those sleeping poorly on medications wish to come off of their medi-
cations and learn to sleep better without them. Hence, it is important to provide
both of these groups with the information and skills included in a psychological
insomnia treatment such as CBT so they can establish and maintain a satisfactory
sleep pattern free of medications. However, it is also important to provide a medi-
cation-tapering program that they can tolerate so as to enhance their chances of
achieving a medication-free status. Admittedly, both the psychological and medica-
tion tapering aspects of the overall treatment have some features that are unique and
specific to those who are hypnotic dependent, so it is useful to consider each of the
aspects of treatment separately.
Hypnotic-dependent insomnia sufferers display many of the unhelpful beliefs
and sleep-disruptive behaviors (e.g., napping, erratic sleep schedules, too much time
in bed, etc.) common to other forms of insomnia. As a result, they benefit from
the sleep education, stimulus control, and sleep restriction strategies included in
typical CBT protocols. However, these people also present with some specific
features that merit special treatment considerations. Clinical observations often
show that such individuals have a low sense of self-efficacy in regard to sleep and
tend to believe that they simply cannot sleep at night or function in the daytime
without their sleep medications. Intermittently, they may try to sleep without their
medications to test how they do without medication, but such attempts invariably
result in elevated sleep-focused anxiety and arousal that makes sleep more difficult
and inadvertently reinforces their unhelpful beliefs about sleep. In working with
these individuals, it is useful to discourage such “experiments” at least at the outset
of treatment to avoid the undesirable outcomes mentioned. Often, it is also useful
to help examine and challenge their beliefs and attitudes about sleep and about their
74
5 Medication Considerations
inability to sleep and cope with poor nights off of medications. For some, this may
be achieved through simple discussion, but many people benefit from structured
“homework” exercises designed to help them reframe their thoughts about their
sleep problems. For example, we (Edinger & Carney, 2008) have suggested using
“thought records” (presented more fully in Chap. 8) as a tool towards achieving this
end. This instrument helps to identify unhelpful sleep-related thoughts, weigh out
evidence for and against these beliefs, and then develop more balanced and con-
structive modes of thinking to manage their sleep-related distress. Figure 5.2 shows
how someone with hypnotic-dependence might complete this instrument to combat
unhelpful thinking about discontinuing sleep medication.
Along with these strategies, those exhibiting hypnotic-dependence benefit from
structured medication-tapering programs to assist them in striving toward eventual
medication abstinence. In implementing any medication-tapering program, it is
advisable to enlist the collaboration of a physician to guide the tapering process and
to address any adverse effects that may arise. Two approaches that have shown
some efficacy when combined with psychological insomnia therapies are those
reported by Lichstein et al. (1999) and Morin’s group (Belleville et al., 2007; Morin
et al., 2004). In the former approach, the patient’s usual p.r.n. hypnotic medication
dose at the time to treatment entry is first converted into the number of lowest
recommended dosage (LRD) as defined by the Physician’s Desk Reference (PDR).
For example, if the LRD for a particular medication is 5 mg, then the patient
would be taking 14 LRDs per week if the nightly dose taken was 10 mg. An indi-
vidual’s sleep medication is then gradually tapered by one nightly dose per week
(i.e., 1–2 LRDs per week depending on the starting dose), usually starting with the
Mood
Do you feel
(Intensity 0-
Evidence for the Evidence against Adaptive/Coping
any
Situation
100%)
Thoughts
thought
the thought
statement
differently?
Sitting
Frustrated thinking how
Last week I
I’ve slept
I may not be
Frustrated
in my
(100%)
sleepy I feel
fell asleep at
poorly and
at my best,
(50%)
office
I’m never going
my desk
felt the same
but the truth
after a
to be able to
several times
way even when is, I end up
night
Worried
sleep without
after night
I have taken
doing well at
Worried
without
(80%)
sleeping pills
without sleep
my sleeping
work anyway
(20%)
taking
medicine
pills
sleep
I’ve noticed
medicine
Tired
I’m guess I am
I’m starting
I often feel
there are
Tired
(100%)
stuck having to
to avoid
better once I
things I can
(85%)
take sleeping
doing things I
get myself
do to cope
pills forever
used to enjoy
started and
with the
end up
fatigue, so it
I can’t keep
enjoying what
I’ve been
is not
going on like
I choose to do
taking these
hopeless
this
socially
pills for two
years now
I am learning
some new
What’s wrong
skills that
with me?
should help me
be able to
sleep better
on my own
Fig. 5.2
Thought Record example for hypnotic-dependence
References
75
easiest nights and initially avoiding consecutive nights that are medication free.
The approach utilized by Morin’s group (Belleville et al., 2007; Morin et al., 2004)
includes the following: (a) patients initially establish a medication reduction goal
for each week; (b) those using more than one hypnotic first complete a stabilization
phase, which requires them to eliminate multiple hypnotics and to use of a single
hypnotic only; (c) the initial dosage is reduced by about 25% every 2 weeks until
the lowest therapeutic dose is reached; (d) drug-free nights are progressively intro-
duced; and (e) nights with and without hypnotics were planned in advance (i.e.,
noncontingently).
Previous tests of these approaches have yielded positive results with each.
Lichstein et al. (1999) noted that their approach led to an 80% in sleep medication
use by the end of the treatment. Patients who underwent this tapering method cou-
pled with relaxation therapy also achieved notable improvements in sleep efficiency
and sleep quality as well. In studies by Morin’s group (Belleville et al., 2007; Morin
et al., 2004), those who received a combined treatment of CBT and the medication-
tapering approach described, achieved greater sleep and medication reduction out-
comes considered collectively than did comparison groups who received CBT alone
or the medication tapering instructions alone. The use of the types of structured
medication tapering approaches, described along with a psychological insomnia
therapy, appears to be an optimal method for addressing the sleep problems and
medication reduction goal of those who are dependent on hypnotic medications.
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