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SLEEP BASICS Cognitive Behavioral Sleep Interventions

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Title: SLEEP BASICS Cognitive Behavioral Sleep Interventions


1
SLEEP BASICS Cognitive Behavioral Sleep
Interventions
  • Caron Treatment Centers
  • Stephen M. Lange, Ph.D., ABSNP

2
Basic Principles
  • We have a 24 hour sleep-wake cycle.
  • We have greater control over how we spend our
    daytime hours than our sleep hours.
  • We cannot have sleep problems we can have
    problems with our sleep-wake cycle.
  • Our sleep quality tonight is shaped by how we
    spend our day.
  • Sleep can improve by attention to the B-A-S-I-C
    I-H.

3
Basic Principles, Continued
  • Sleep is an essential, life sustaining activity.
  • Purposes of sleep may include repair of body
    systems, energy conservation, memory
    consolidation, brain development, discharge of
    emotions (NIH, 2003).
  • Fatigue and sleep deprivation are relapse
    triggers (Think HALT).
  • Sleep is mediated by an internal timing mechanism
    called the Superchiasmatic Nucleus in the
    Hypothalamus.
  • Sleep is also mediated by environmental cues,
    especially natural daylight.

4
Remember This?
  • Here comes the sun, do do do do Here comes the
    sun, and I say It's all right Little darling
    The smiles returning to the faces Little
    darling It seems like years since it's been here
  • Lyrics by George Harrison, recorded by The
    Beatles

5
Basic Principles, III
  • Sleep depends on urge to sleep and
    parasympathetic nervous system activity
    (relaxation response).
  • Activation of the sympathetic nervous system
    (fight or flight response) inhibits sleep.
  • Ways in which patients respond to insomnia, such
    as laying in bed awake, worrying about sleepiness
    and deficits the next day, using their beds for
    mental work can condition a sympathetic response
    to bedtime, perpetuating insomnia.
  • We need to teach patients to replace ineffective
    responses to insomnia, such as napping, caffeine
    abuse, worrying, with a relaxation response.

6
B-A-S-I-C I-H(An Idea of Dr. Arnie Lazarus)
  • B Behaviors
  • A Affect (Emotions)
  • S Sensations
  • I Imagery
  • C Cognitions (Thoughts)
  • I Interpersonal
  • H Health

7
Sleep Quality
  • Sleep Architecture refers to how we progress
    through the five stages of sleep throughout the
    night. This is not something we have much control
    over.
  • Sleep Duration is the number of hours of sleep
    within a nighttime.
  • Restorative Sleep is sleep that helps us feel
    rested and alert during the daytime.
  • Latency of sleep onset refers to how long it
    takes to fall asleep.

8
Sleep Therapy Goals
  • Increasing sleep duration is not a well-selected
    goal.
  • It is more important to wake rested and to feel
    alert during the daytime than to have a magic
    number of hours of sleep.
  • Sleep duration is highly personal and while there
    are averages at different ages, there is no
    magic, universal sleep duration.

9
Sleep Therapy Goals, II
  • Avoid using decreasing sleep onset latency as a
    sleep goal.
  • Can set a difficult standard for individuals who
    are very anxious or who are perfectionists.
  • Can lead to frustration when progress is not
    perceived.

10
Sleep Therapy Goals, III
  • The best sleep goals are
  • Increase daytime alertness.
  • Increase feeling rested in the morning.
  • Improve habits that are sleep promoting.
  • Develop realistic expectations about sleep.
  • Decrease frustration surrounding sleep.
  • Improve understanding of sleep and especially how
    much an individual can affect their sleep
    quality.
  • Understand sleep problems as relapse triggers.

11
Basic Psycho-education
  • Patients need to know that drugs and alcohol
    directly affect sleep architecture, leading to
    sleep that is shallow. Dreaming may be disturbed
    or absent. Patients may think that they have not
    slept at all, and they may wake up feeling tired.
  • As a result of the cumulative disturbance of
    sleep architecture, patients enter their first
    weeks of sobriety feeling exhausted with a
    literal sleep debt.
  • Additionally, when dreaming has been disrupted
    during active addiction, patients may have a REM
    rebound.

12
Basic Psycho-education
  • Alcohol, Benzodiazepines, and Opioids can
    exacerbate sleep apnea leading to excessive
    drowsiness, hypertension, death rates.
  • Other drug effects that influence patients sense
    of physical and emotional wellbeing include pain
    perception. Patients generally, and those who
    used opiods and alcohol particularly, have
    exaggerated pain perception in the first 4- 6
    weeks following their last use.

13
Basic Psycho-education
  • It may take 4-6 weeks before these effects wear
    off, and patients with tolerance and withdrawal
    will take the longest. Some patients will take
    much, much longer. Some patients will never
    return to their baseline sleep.
  • Help patients realize that current sleep problems
    are likely to improve with time. There is a core
    of acceptance and surrender involved with this
    process.

14
Basic Psycho-education
  • Unmanageability refers to the chaos between our
    patients and their worlds, and also the chaos
    within physical, emotional and spiritual.
  • Without conveying callousness or disregard for
    our patients pain, think about how we can use
    the physical and emotional chaos around
    sleeplessness and fatigue as metaphor.
  • First Step includes the acceptance of the world
    as it is, and our powerlessness over much of our
    world, even our interior worlds. Surrender also
    means that we have to accept our bodies
    schedules for healing, and not try to impose our
    wills on our bodies.

15
Did You Know?
  • Question How many times are the words sleep or
    sleeping mentioned in the Big Book?
  • A. 12
  • B. 43
  • C. 192
  • D. 31

16
Did You Know?
  • Question How many times are the words sleep or
    sleeping mentioned in the Big Book?
  • A. 12
  • B. 43
  • C. 192
  • D. 31

17
Basic Psycho-education
  • Coming to inpatient treatment involves loss on
    many, many levels loss of the (inaccurate!)
    perception of autonomy, loss of social status,
    loss of the familiar, separation from people and
    even pets. We also lose our sleep environments.
    As a child, my favorite sleep environment was my
    grandmothers NYC apartment, with city sounds of
    sirens, delivery trucks, couples walking, the
    elevated train on Northern Boulevard, Queens.
  • Just like we have in Wernersville, PA!

18
Basic Psycho-education
  • At night,we relax our ego defenses, those mental
    tools we use to inhibit affect and impulses.
    While we may be able to work through struggles
    during the day, at night conflicts (internal and
    external), anger, sadness, worry can flood
    through.
  • Even though we can have very sleepless nights as
    a result, our nighttime demons are wonderfully
    informative about the emotions we bottle up. It
    hurts less when we use this information!
  • If we are sleepless is this part of our moral
    inventory?

19
Remember this?
  • In the wee small hours of the morning
  • While the whole wide world is fast asleep
  • You lie awake thinking
  • Song lyrics by Bob Hilliard recorded by Frank
    Sinatra and by Carly Simon

20
Basic Psycho-education
  • Sleep hygiene refers to the way we manage our
    activity level throughout the day and night.
    Humans are diurnal animals. Unlike the nocturnal
    bats, we hunt during the day and sleep at
    night.
  • In active addiction, people live the bat
    schedule. It takes work to return to the human
    schedule.
  • As all teenagers know (and most ignore),
    deviating from sleep patterns over a weekend can
    result in disrupted sleep for days afterward
    imagine years of abnormal sleep! Said another
    way, if a single jet flight can disrupt your
    circadian rhythms for a week, imagine the
    cumulative effect of years of disrupted
    schedules.

21
Basic Psycho-education
  • Even though sleep and the surrender aspect of
    First Step are so intimately related, we have
    power over our recovery choices. It is possible
    for patients to feel hopeful about improvements
    in sleep as they practice recovery habits.
  • For most individuals with insomnia, it is not
    necessary to take a pill to sleep. In fact,
    behavior change outperforms sleep medications
    whenever research studies compare the two types
    of therapies.

22
Used with permission by the cartoonistgroup.com.
The cartoonist is Darrin Bell.
23
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Behaviors can be sleep promoting or sleep
    killers.
  • Daytime sleep is the biggest single sleep killer.
    The single most effective sleep intervention is
    daytime sleep restriction. Sleepiness is a drive
    state, like hunger and thirst. Daytime sleep
    reduces the urge to sleep at night just like a
    snack can ruin your supper.
  • Sleep promoting (recovery) behaviors during the
    day include waking up at the same time each day,
    moderate physical exercise, daytime sunlight,
    staying intellectually and emotionally engaged.
  • Intervention During the day, what do you do to
    keep yourself, awake, alert, active?

24
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Behaviors in the evening and at night that
    promote sleep include Winding down in the
    evening hours, bathing or showering, having a
    nighttime ritual or routine, listening to quiet
    or calming music, and getting up from bed if
    sleep onset latency is greater than 20 minutes.
  • Nighttime sleep killers include laying in bed
    awake if sleep onset is delayed, exercise late in
    the evening, using bed for activities other than
    sleep.
  • Intervention What do you do to prepare for
    sleep, starting around dinner time?

25
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Affect regulation is an important skill for
    sleep. Going to sleep angry, sad, frustrated,
    anxious is a sleep killer.
  • Affect regulation skills can include Progressive
    Muscle Relaxation, meditation, journaling, prayer
    and Bible reading, practicing gratitude.
  • Intervention Teach PMR, meditation,
    diaphragmatic breathing.
  • Intervention Discuss approaches to self-soothing
    and affect regulation that already fit into the
    patients personality and recovery skills.

26
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Sensation refers to the six senses Vision,
    hearing, touch, smell, taste, and position in
    space.
  • Patients should think about what makes them
    comfortable in bed.
  • Stimulus Control refers to creating a good sleep
    environment.
  • A slightly cool room is preferable for most
    people.
  • Progressive Muscle Relaxation, Yoga, or
    stretching can help with body sensations of
    muscle tension.
  • Intervention Discuss what aspects of stimulus
    control patients can use in treatment.

27
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Imagery can be useful for some patients
  • Patients with significant trauma symptoms or
    psychosis should not use guided imagery.
  • Imagery uses the imagination to escape to a
    mental scene which is peaceful and calming.
  • Intervention Consult with psychology staff about
    the use of imagery with any individual patient.
    If appropriate, teach use of imagery.

28
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Cognitions refer to thoughts that are sleep
    killers.
  • A bad case of the I can't!
  • Unreasonable sleep expectations.
  • The single most harmful sleep cognition is, I
    will never sleep!
  • Worries of the day including those about money,
    family, aftercare, etc. all affect sleep.
    Meditation including especially Breath Awareness
    can help with intrusive, repetitive thoughts or
    worries.
  • If my sleep is disturbed, am I wrestling with or
    resisting change? How come the Big Book stories
    all seem to include the line, That night I
    slept after the authors achieve First Step or
    spiritual connection?
  • Intervention What do you think about at night
    when you lay in bed?

29
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Interpersonal factors can contribute to sleep.
  • Do I need to resolve a dispute?
  • Do I need to make amends?
  • Do I need to turn over a problem to my Higher
    Power?
  • Intervention Do you ever have thoughts, images,
    worries, dreams about conflicts with other people
    at night? Do you replay scenes with other people
    when you try to go to sleep? What does that say
    about moral inventory and amends?

30
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Health behaviors affect sleep
  • Three scheduled, healthy meals and two healthy
    snacks help regulate BG.
  • Sugar and caffeine at night are sleep killers.
    Think about hidden sugar in cereals and juices.
  • Salty foods stimulate thirst which can interfere
    with sleep.
  • Nicotine is a psychostimulant. If smoking calms
    you down, then what you are experiencing between
    smokes is withdrawal!
  • Craving management and sleep.
  • Intervention What do you eat at night?

31
Using the B-A-S-I-C I-H
  • Maintaining healthy body weight helps with sleep.
    Pushing air in and out of an obese body is more
    strenuous than breathing with a smaller body.
  • Obesity can exacerbate sleep apnea.
  • The bitter irony is that obesity can adversely
    affect sleep, and poor sleep can raise the risk
    for obesity.
  • Intervention Fitness and wellness.

32
PMR
  • PMR stands for Progressive Muscle Relaxation
  • A sense of relaxation is achieved by alternating
    tension and relaxation in muscle groups
  • May be combined with guided imagery if
    appropriate

33
Breath Awareness
  • Using as many senses as possible to experience
    breathing
  • A basic meditation skill
  • Relaxing
  • Promotes a detached awareness that helps regulate
    affect
  • Daily mindfulness

34
Diaphragmatic Breathing
  • Breathing using the diaphragm at the base of the
    chest cavity
  • Stretches muscles in the torso
  • Deep breathing takes in more oxygen than shallow
    breathing
  • Relaxing, calming activity

35
Skills Practice
  • Diaphragmatic Breathing
  • PMR and Breath Awareness
  • Gratitude Meditation

36
Questions, Comments, Concerns?

37
Additional Resources
  • Getting a Good Nights Sleep by Nancy
    Foldvary-Schaefer
  • How to Get a Great Nights Sleep by H. Valfi and
    Pamela Valfi
  • Understanding Sleep by Mark R. Pressman and
    William C. Orr
  • Sleep, Sleep Disorders and Biological Rhythms,
    NIH Publication No. 04-4989

38
Whats New at Caron Treatment Centers
  • Young Adult Female Program
  • Follows many of the same treatment modalities as
    Carons highly successful Young Adult Male
    Program
  • Focuses on core issues of chemical dependency
    that may face women ages 20-25
  • Chronic Pain, Young Adult and Adolescent
    Assessment Programs
  • Intensive 5-day programs designed specifically to
    rule in or rule out a diagnosis of chemical
    dependency
  • Visit www.AssessMyFamily.org for more information
  • Smoke/Tobacco Free Continuum of Care in
    Adolescent/Young Adult Facilities
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