dc.description.abstract | Insomnia is a sleep disorder that is often complained by adults. The
impacts of insomnia have been widely reported to decrease productivities, less involvement
in social activities, and decline mental health status. Interventions to main quality and
quantity of sleep among adults emphasized the benefits of cognitive behavioral therapy
(CBT). Nevertheless, the implementations and effects of this particular therapy among
adults seems inconsistent. Therefore, this study aims to determine the effect of cognitive
behavioral therapy on insomniacs.
Method: A literature review with article searches conducted on the PubMed, SpringerLink,
ScienceDirect, and Google Scholar databases was applied, The keywords Cognitive
Behavioral Therapy (AND) Insomnia, in articles published in 2018-2021. After went
through the selection process, the authors received 10 articles, 6 articles used the
Randomized Control Trial method, 1 Case Series Study article, 2 pre-experimental articles,
1 Single-Arm Pilot Trial article.
Results: The following characteristics of cognitive behavioral therapy was reported to
positively impacts of adults with insomnia. The interventions significantly reduced level of
insomnia of adults age 26- to 35-year-old, the given intervention was delivered for a
minimum 45 minutes to a maximum 60-minutes, and the length of the program delivered
was one to three months. Cognitive behavioral therapy is significant for reducing insomnia.
Conclusions: This review on people with insomnia treated by CBT underlined the impact
of intervention on the targeted outcomes. The findings may have led to greater benefits and
that the targeted population had access to high quality of sleep care. Evidence from this
review suggested a comprehensive sleep management will likely lead to further
improvements, as will continue support and implementation beyond the end of the
program. A critical need to develop methodologically comprehensive trials with a larger
sample size and long follow-up periods which rigorously evaluate the efficacy of CBT
interventions associated with sleep are required. | en_US |