The words you are searching are inside this book. To get more targeted content, please make full-text search by clicking here.

by Jack D. Edinger (Author), Colleen E. Carney (Author) 2015

Discover the best professional documents and content resources in AnyFlip Document Base.
Search
Published by medical, 2023-01-18 23:14:26

Overcoming Insomnia: A Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Approach 2nd

by Jack D. Edinger (Author), Colleen E. Carney (Author) 2015

Keywords: sleep

138 Morin, C.  M., R. A.  Kowatch, T. Barry, and E. Walton (1993). “Cognitive-behavior therapy for late-life insomnia.” J Consult Clin Psychol 61(1): 137–146. Morin, C. M., R. A. Kowatch, and J. B. Wade (1989). “Behavioral management of sleep disturbances secondary to chronic pain.” J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry 20(4): 295–302. Morin, C.  M., J. Stone, D. Trinkle, J. Mercer, and S. Remsberg (1993). “Dysfunctional beliefs and attitudes about sleep among older adults with and without insomnia complaints.” Psychol Aging 8(3): 463–467. Morin, C. M., A. Vallieres, H. Ivers, S. Bouchard and C. H. Bastien (2003). “Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitudes and Sleep (DBAS): Validation of a briefer version (DBAS-16).” Sleep 26(Suppl.): A294. Nicassio, P., and R. Bootzin (1974). “A comparison of progressive relaxation and autogenic training as treatments for insomnia.” J Abnorm Psychol 83(3): 253–260. Oosterhuis, A., and E. C. Klip (1997). “The treatment of insomnia through mass media, the results of a televised behavioral training programme.” Soc Sci Med 45(8): 1223–1229. Ozminkowski, R. J., S. Wang, and J. K. Walsh (2007). “The direct and indirect costs of untreated insomnia in adults in the United States.” Sleep 30(3): 263–273. Rae, M. J., and A. G. Harvey (2004). “Behavioural experiments in chronic insomnia.” The Oxford guide to behavioural experiments in cognitive therapy, eds. J. Bennett-Levy, G. Butler, M. J. V. Fennell, A. Hackmann, M. Mueller, and D. Westbrook. Oxford, UK, Oxford University Press. Riedel, B. W., K. L. Lichstein, and W. O. Dwyer (1995). “Sleep compression and sleep education for older insomniacs: Self-help versus therapist guidance.” Psychol Aging 10(1): 54–63. Ritterband, L.  M., E. T.  Bailey, F. P.  Thorndike, H. R.  Lord, L. Farrell-Carnahan, and L. D. Baum (2012). “Initial evaluation of an Internet intervention to improve the sleep of cancer survivors with insomnia.” Psychooncology 21(7): 695–705. Roth, T., C. Coulouvrat, G. Hajak, M. D.  Lakoma, N. A.  Sampson, V. Shahly, A. C.  Shillington, J. J.  Stephenson, J. K.  Walsh, and R. C.  Kessler (2011). “Prevalence and perceived health associated with insomnia based on DSM-IV-TR; International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision; and Research Diagnostic Criteria/International Classification of Sleep Disorders, Second Edition criteria: Results from the America Insomnia Survey.” Biol Psychiatry 69(6): 592–600.


139 Roth, T., J. K. Walsh, A. Krystal, T. Wessel, and T. A. Roehrs (2005). “An evaluation of the efficacy and safety of eszopiclone over 12 months in patients with chronic primary insomnia.” Sleep Med 6(6): 487–495. Rybarczyk, B., M. Lopez, R. Benson, C. Alsten, and E. Stepanski (2002). “Efficacy of two behavioral treatment programs for comorbid geriatric insomnia.” Psychol Aging 17(2): 288–298. Savard, J., M. H. Savard, and C. M. Morin (2002). Insomnia. Handbook of assessment and treatment planning for psychological disorders, ed. B. D. Antony MM. New York, Guilford: 523–555. Savard, J., S. Simard, H. Ivers, and C. M. Morin (2005). “Randomized study on the efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia secondary to breast cancer, part I: Sleep and psychological effects.” J Clin Oncol 23(25): 6083–6096. Schultz, J. H., and W. Luthe (1959). Autogenic training: A psychophysiologic approach in psychotherapy. New York, Grune & Stratton. Simon, G. E., and M. VonKorff (1997). “Prevalence, burden, and treatment of insomnia in primary care.” Am J Psychiatry 154(10): 1417–1423. Sivertsen, B., S. Omvik, S. Pallesen, B. Bjorvatn, O. E. Havik, G. Kvale, G. H. Nielsen, and I. H. Nordhus (2006). “Cognitive behavioral therapy vs zopiclone for treatment of chronic primary insomnia in older adults: A randomized controlled trial.” JAMA 295(24): 2851–2858. Smith, M. T., M. I. Huang, and R. Manber (2005). “Cognitive behavior therapy for chronic insomnia occurring within the context of medical and psychiatric disorders.” Clin Psychol Rev 25(5): 559–592. Soeffing, J., K. Lichstein, S. Nau, C. McCrae, N. Wilson, R. Aguillard, K. Lester, and A. Bush (2007). “Psychological treatment of insomnia in hypnotic-dependant older adults.” Sleep Medicine 16: Epub ahead of print. Spielman, A., and M. Anderson (1999). The clinical interview and treatment planning as a guide to understanding the nature of insomnia: The CCNY insomnia interview. Sleep disorders medicine: Basic science, technical considerations, and clinical aspects, 2nd ed., ed. S. Chokroverty. Boston, Butterworth-Heinemann: 385–416. Spielman, A.  J., L. S.  Caruso, and P. B.  Glovinsky (1987). “A behavioral perspective on insomnia treatment.” Psychiatr Clin North Am 10(4): 541–553. Spielman, A. J., P. Saskin, and M. J. Thorpy (1987). “Treatment of chronic insomnia by restriction of time in bed.” Sleep 10(1): 45–56. Taylor, D. J., K. L. Lichstein, J. Weinstock, S. Sanford, and J. R. Temple (2007). “A pilot study of cognitive-behavioral therapy of insomnia in people with mild depression.” Behav Ther 38(1): 49–57.


140 Thomsen, D. K., M. Y. Mehlsen, S. Christensen, and R. Zachariae (2003). “Rumination:  Relationship with negative mood and sleep quality.” Pers Indiv Differ 34: 1293–1301. Vollrath, M., W. Wicki, and J. Angst (1989). “The Zurich study. VIII. Insomnia:  Association with depression, anxiety, somatic syndromes, and course of insomnia.” Eur Arch Psychiatry Neurol Sci 239(2): 113–124. Walsh, J. K., and P. K. Schweitzer (1999). “Ten-year trends in the pharmacological treatment of insomnia.” Sleep 22(3): 371–375. Webb, W.  B. (1988). “An objective behavioral model of sleep.” Sleep 11(5): 488–496. Weissman, M. M., S. Greenwald, G. Nino-Murcia, and W. C. Dement (1997). “The morbidity of insomnia uncomplicated by psychiatric disorders.” Gen Hosp Psychiatry 19(4): 245–250. Wicklow, A., and C. A. Espie (2000). “Intrusive thoughts and their relationship to actigraphic measurement of sleep:  towards a cognitive model of insomnia.” Behav Res Ther 38: 679–693.


141 About the Authors Jack D. Edinger, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Medicine at National Jewish Health in Denver, Colorado. Dr. Edinger is a world leader in insomnia treatment and insomnia research. He is recognized internationally for his research and clinical leadership in the areas of insomnia diagnosis and treatment. His early case series studies are among the very first to document the effectiveness of current-day cognitive behavioral insomnia therapy approaches. He has over 32 years of research and clinical experience working with insomnia patients. Colleen E. Carney, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology and Director of the Sleep and Depression Laboratory at Ryerson University in Toronto. Dr. Carney is a world-renowned expert in comorbid insomnias and the treatment of insomnia with cognitive behavior therapy (CBT). In the Sleep and Depression Laboratory she trains graduate students and treatment providers in CBT for insomnia. She also provides CBT training workshops worldwide. She uses the treatment described in this book in her randomized controlled trials, funded by such agencies as the National Institute of Mental Health, Canadian Institutes for Health Research, and the National Institute for Nursing Research. Dr. Carney is passionate about improving access to empirically supported insomnia therapy to patients.


Click to View FlipBook Version