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Unravelling the prospective associations between mixed anxiety-depression and insomnia during the course of cognitive behavioral therapy

Thun, Eirunn; Sivertsen, Børge; Knapstad, Marit; Smith, Otto Robert Frans
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2720899
Date
2019
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  • Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care [1874]
  • Registrations from Cristin [65]
Original version
Psychosomatic Medicine. 2019, 81 (4), 333-340.   10.1097/PSY.0000000000000676
Abstract
Objective

Previous studies have suggested that there is a reciprocal relationship between anxiety/depression and insomnia. However, little is known about the prospective relationships between these constructs across the course of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). The aim of the study was to examine these relationships in clients who received short-term CBT in a primary care setting.

Methods

A total of 653 clients (mean [SD] age = 37.8 [12.9], 26.4% men) with mild to moderate levels of anxiety and depression and a treatment duration of at least 7 weeks were included for analyses. The clients completed questionnaires measuring mixed anxiety-depression (MAD – Patient Health Questionnaire Anxiety and Depression Scale) and insomnia (3 items derived from the Karolinska Sleep Questionnaire representing core DSM-V criteria) on a session-to-session basis. The data were analyzed using latent growth curve models and random intercept cross-lagged panel models.

Results

The results of the latent growth curve models showed that there was a significant decrease in both MAD (cubic slope; B = .002, p < .001, quadratic slope; B = .036, p < .001, linear slope; B = −.205, p < .001) and insomnia (linear slope; B = −.080, p < .001) across treatment. A strong correlation (r = .838, p < .001) between the linear slopes indicated co-occurring change processes. The cross-lagged panel model showed that insomnia significantly predicted MAD at the subsequent measurements (B = .190, p < .001), but not vice versa (B = .252, p = .343).

Conclusions

Changes in MAD and insomnia are co-occurring processes during the course of CBT. Changes in insomnia predicted prospectively changes in MAD, but not vice versa. Targeting insomnia in the context of brief CBT in clients with mild to moderate anxiety and depression may therefore further reduce not only symptoms of insomnia but also symptoms of anxiety and depression.
Publisher
Wolters Kluwer
Journal
Psychosomatic Medicine
Copyright
Copyright 2019 by the American Psychosomatic Society

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