The relationship between beliefs about sleep and adherence to behavioral treatment combined with meditation for insomnia

Cvengros, Jamie A. and Crawford, Megan and Manber, Rachel and Ong, Jason C. (2015) The relationship between beliefs about sleep and adherence to behavioral treatment combined with meditation for insomnia. Behavioral Sleep Medicine, 13 (1). pp. 52-63. ISSN 1540-2010 (https://doi.org/10.1080/15402002.2013.838767)

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Abstract

This study examined beliefs about sleep, as measured by the Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitudes about Sleep (DBAS) scale, as predictors of adherence to 3 specific insomnia treatment recommendations: restriction of time spent in bed, maintenance of a consistent rise time, and completion of daily meditation practice. Higher DBAS scores predicted poorer adherence to restriction of time spent in bed and to maintenance of a prescribed rise time. DBAS scores were not associated with completion of daily meditation. These preliminary findings suggest that pre-treatment beliefs about sleep may impact patient engagement with behavioral recommendations regarding time in bed and consistent rise time during treatment for insomnia.