A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia
Background and Objective Theory suggests that during the transition from acute to chronic insomnia a shift in attention, from life events to sleep difficulties, occurs. The aim of this study was to examine whether this shift indeed exists, by measuring the frequency and type of preoccupations in acu...
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Korean Society of Sleep Medicine
2013-12-01
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doaj-249b75da2f6b41c18288a836a1d7cf622020-11-25T00:15:10ZengKorean Society of Sleep MedicineSleep Medicine Research2093-91752233-88532013-12-0142435010.17241/smr.2013.4.2.4339A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute InsomniaSamantha Man0Mark Freeston1Jason. G. Ellis2David. R. Lee3 School of Psychology, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK Institute of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK Northumbria Centre for Sleep Research, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK Sleep Unlimited Ltd, County Durham, UKBackground and Objective Theory suggests that during the transition from acute to chronic insomnia a shift in attention, from life events to sleep difficulties, occurs. The aim of this study was to examine whether this shift indeed exists, by measuring the frequency and type of preoccupations in acute and chronic insomnia. Methods Using a cross-sectional design, two groups [people with acute insomnia (n = 11) and chronic insomnia (n = 20)] completed a series of standardized and semi-idiosyncratic measures daily, over the period of one week. They also wore actigraphs to provide objective measures of sleep parameters. Results Findings suggest no differences in preoccupation between the two groups but show the acute insomnia group report significantly higher levels of perceived stress. Exploratory analysis suggests a reduction in scores on standardized measures across all participants between time 1 and time 2, and no differences on objectively measured sleep parameters. Conclusions Results indicate there is no difference between people with acute and chronic insomnia in level, and type, of reported preoccupation and that people with acute insomnia are as preoccupied during the day by both sleep and life events, as people with chronic insomnia. Limitations are discussed and future research questions are considered.http://www.sleepmedres.org/upload/pdf/smr-4-2-43.pdfAcute insomniaAdjustment insomniaChronic insomniaPreoccupationStress |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Samantha Man Mark Freeston Jason. G. Ellis David. R. Lee |
spellingShingle |
Samantha Man Mark Freeston Jason. G. Ellis David. R. Lee A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia Sleep Medicine Research Acute insomnia Adjustment insomnia Chronic insomnia Preoccupation Stress |
author_facet |
Samantha Man Mark Freeston Jason. G. Ellis David. R. Lee |
author_sort |
Samantha Man |
title |
A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia |
title_short |
A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia |
title_full |
A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia |
title_fullStr |
A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Pilot Study Investigating Differences in Sleep and Life Preoccupations in Chronic and Acute Insomnia |
title_sort |
pilot study investigating differences in sleep and life preoccupations in chronic and acute insomnia |
publisher |
Korean Society of Sleep Medicine |
series |
Sleep Medicine Research |
issn |
2093-9175 2233-8853 |
publishDate |
2013-12-01 |
description |
Background and Objective Theory suggests that during the transition from acute to chronic insomnia a shift in attention, from life events to sleep difficulties, occurs. The aim of this study was to examine whether this shift indeed exists, by measuring the frequency and type of preoccupations in acute and chronic insomnia. Methods Using a cross-sectional design, two groups [people with acute insomnia (n = 11) and chronic insomnia (n = 20)] completed a series of standardized and semi-idiosyncratic measures daily, over the period of one week. They also wore actigraphs to provide objective measures of sleep parameters. Results Findings suggest no differences in preoccupation between the two groups but show the acute insomnia group report significantly higher levels of perceived stress. Exploratory analysis suggests a reduction in scores on standardized measures across all participants between time 1 and time 2, and no differences on objectively measured sleep parameters. Conclusions Results indicate there is no difference between people with acute and chronic insomnia in level, and type, of reported preoccupation and that people with acute insomnia are as preoccupied during the day by both sleep and life events, as people with chronic insomnia. Limitations are discussed and future research questions are considered. |
topic |
Acute insomnia Adjustment insomnia Chronic insomnia Preoccupation Stress |
url |
http://www.sleepmedres.org/upload/pdf/smr-4-2-43.pdf |
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