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  • Can the internet cure insomnia?

    Can the internet cure insomnia?
    By Laura Schocker

    BBC News Magazine
    Wednesday, 26 August 2009 14:38 UK

    One out of 10 Britons can't fall asleep at night. But do new online
    treatments for insomnia mean a cure is just a few clicks away?

    Midnight's not so bad. Some quick number crunching and you figure you can
    still get six hours of shut-eye before facing the morning.

    Two in the morning is a little bleaker. You're down to four hours - and
    that's if sleep comes right away.

    At three, those glowing red numbers on the alarm clock seem to be screaming
    one thing: "You're not getting more than three hours tonight."

    By four, you're ready to give up, grab a laptop and while away the remaining
    hours with some mindless web surfing. But maybe it's not such a bad idea -
    that computer screen could just be the solution for insomniacs.

    Help with sleeplessness is available on the NHS, but places can be limited
    and waiting lists long. But these are free, and the online courses are
    currently offered on a commercial basis from the United States.

    Number watching

    It's a promise that reads rather like an e-mail spam subject: "End sleepless
    nights once and for all - at home." But over the past few years, researchers
    have been developing internet-based courses designed to do exactly that.

    Now some US studies claim that on-screen therapy may be just as effective as
    face-to-face cognitive behavioural therapy.

    Everyone who has had a few bad nights of sleep knows the folk remedies.
    Drink warm milk, take a hot bath, sip herbal tea, or count sheep.

    No luck? It used to seem like the only option was to hope sleep would come,
    or to place yourself on a waiting list for a cognitive behavioural
    therapist, suffering through wakeful nights and groggy days in the meantime.

    "We're talking about the most common mental health problem in the UK, and
    probably the world," says Colin Espie, director of the University of Glasgow
    Sleep Centre. "But less than half of people with insomnia mention it to
    their doctors."

    Many feel insomnia is too trivial to mention to their GP, or they think it's
    something they can manage on their own, says Derk-Jan Dijk, Professor of
    Sleep and Physiology at the University of Surrey.

    "It's a cultural thing that sleep is not important," he says. "You may not
    want to admit that you didn't sleep very well during the night because you
    were worried about that meeting with your manager."

    And even if people are ready to talk about it, they may not have the
    resources to do so. Millions of people in the UK have chronic insomnia, but
    only several hundred psychologists are trained in this type of therapy. The
    NHS is working to make treatment easier to find. The Department of Health
    says more than 800 cognitive behavioural therapists are now in training, and
    3,600 are expected to be trained by 2011.

    And online treatments may have the potential to ease this pressure. It's a
    little more modern than, say, sheep counting, but researchers are focused on
    bringing insomnia treatment to the internet. It's about accessibility, says
    Dr Espie, who has examined the approach taken by online courses.

    To the masses

    With online automated courses, therapy that is typically only available on
    an individual or small group basis can be multiplied to reach many more,
    says Dr Richard Bedrosian, an American researcher who developed an online
    insomnia program.

    "We're trying to provide the service to as many people as we can," he says.
    "You can offer these things to millions of people almost as easily as you
    can offer them to dozens of people."

    Yet whether it's dozens or millions, how, exactly, do these courses attempt
    to tackle insomnia?

    These typically take several weeks, include downloadable lessons and,
    ultimately, mimic the doctor/patient relationship.

    "I basically took the treatment programme that we delivered in a
    face-to-face format and turned it into an online format," says Gregg Jacobs,
    an insomnia specialist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School,
    and founder of an online therapy programme.

    Dr Jacobs' five-lesson, five-week course starts by teaching patients about
    insomnia and then offers goals for each week ahead. Patients learn to keep
    to a sleep schedule, reduce negative thoughts about sleep and practise
    relaxation techniques for day and for night.

    "It's a very safe, very anonymous way of treating their insomnia," he says
    of the $25 course.

    In week one, for instance, participants learn to give the minute-by-minute
    clock watching a rest.

    Week two is spent establishing a regular rising time - a tough task for
    insomniacs who try to binge on sleep over the weekends to make up for those
    sleepless weeknights.

    But a bit of commitment - remembering to only lie down when drowsy, to use
    the bed for sleep only so no reading or TV watching, and to never spend more
    than 20 or 30 minutes awake in bed - can eventually regulate sleep. Dr
    Jacobs says about 75% of his patients report significant improvement.

    With success rates similar to face-to-face interventions, will online
    treatments become a widespread and viable option?

    "In many ways, they have advantages over face-to-face care, certainly in the
    ability to reach larger audiences and reduce travel time," says Lee
    Ritterband, a psychologist at the University of Virginia Health System, who
    developed a nine-week online course for a university study. His findings
    were published in July's issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry, a
    medical journal.

    The advantages are reflected in the numbers, says Dr Ritterband. About
    three-quarters of the participants - who all had moderate to severe insomnia
    at the start - finished the course without diagnosable insomnia.

    Patients also saw improvements in how long it took to fall asleep, how long
    they stayed asleep, and how many times they woke through the night.

    A similar study at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada, also had
    similar findings, published earlier this year in the medical journal Sleep.
    Some 80% of participants noticed an improvement in their insomnia.

    Some experts aren't yet convinced, though. While Dr Espie, of the University
    of Glasgow Sleep Centre, says automated systems can help make insomnia
    treatment widely available, others think effective treatment requires the
    human touch.

    "I'm a bit sceptical. I think many people with insomnia really would like to
    have more human contact than they would over the internet," says Jim Horne,
    director of the Sleep Research Centre at Loughborough University. "The more
    personal the approach between the person who is the sufferer and the
    therapist, the better."

    TIPS FOR GETTING TO SLEEP

    Stay positive - if you worry about not sleeping, you won't sleep
    Good sleepers try to stay awake - don't dwell on falling asleep
    One bad night isn't the end of good sleeping patterns - there's always
    tomorrow

    >From Colin Espie, University of Glasgow Sleep Centre

    TREATING INSOMNIA

    Don't nap - the bed shouldn't be for anything but sleep and sex
    Don't stay in bed longer than 20 minutes. If you're not asleep, get up and
    do something else until you feel tired
    Create a pre-sleep routine, like taking a bath or watching TV

    >From University of Virginia
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