精神病患者睡眠问题的认知行为疗法:有效性和可接受性的系统评价

Hannah Wilkinson, Louise C. Johns, Rachel Batchelor, Alex Lau-Zhu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:睡眠问题在精神病患者中很常见。研究表明,睡眠不足与精神病、焦虑和抑郁有因果关系。目的:本综述探讨认知行为疗法(CBT)在治疗精神病患者和精神病高危人群睡眠问题方面的有效性和可接受性。方法检索符合PRISMA指南的4个数据库。符合条件的研究要么评估(a) CBT针对精神病患者或有精神病风险的人的睡眠问题,要么(b)这种治疗的主观体验。未在同行评议期刊上发表的文章被排除在外。观察治疗对睡眠、精神病及其他临床结果的影响。采用定性数据、退学率、不良事件和相关问卷评估可接受性。描述了对标准治疗方案的适应。使用Cochrane随机和非随机试验的偏倚风险工具对研究质量进行评价,并为定性论文制定了清单。结果975条记录中,14条符合要求。最常见的CBT治疗目标是失眠。治疗方案通常采用不限制睡眠的方法。据报道,睡眠结果的效应很大;然而,对其他临床结果的影响尚不清楚。定性数据和可接受性结果表明,参与者积极接受治疗。结论scbt是治疗精神病患者及高危人群睡眠问题的有效且可接受的方法。然而,我们的结论受到少数高质量研究和小样本的限制。需要进一步的金标准研究来为基于证据的指导方针提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cognitive behavioural therapy for sleep problems in psychosis: systematic review of effectiveness and acceptability
Background

Sleep problems are common among people with psychosis. Research suggests poor sleep is causally related to psychosis, anxiety and depression.

Aims

This review investigates the effectiveness and acceptability of cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) in targeting sleep problems in people with and at risk of psychosis.

Method

Four databases were searched in line with PRISMA guidelines. Eligible studies either evaluated (a) CBT targeting sleep problems in people with or at risk of psychosis, or (b) subjective experiences of this treatment. Articles not published in peer-review journals were excluded. Treatment effectiveness was investigated for sleep, psychosis and other clinical outcomes. Acceptability was evaluated using qualitative data, drop-out rates, adverse events and relevant questionnaires. Adaptations to standard treatment protocols were described. Research quality was appraised using Cochrane Risk of Bias tools for randomised and non-randomised trials, and a checklist was developed for qualitative papers.

Results

Of the 975 records identified, 14 were eligible. The most common CBT target was insomnia. Treatment protocols were typically adapted by omitting sleep restriction. Large effect sizes were reported for sleep outcomes; however, effects for other clinical outcomes were less clear. Qualitative data and acceptability outcomes suggest that treatment was received positively by participants.

Conclusions

CBT is an effective and acceptable treatment for sleep problems in people with and at risk of psychosis. However, our conclusions are limited by few good-quality studies and small samples. Further gold-standard research is required to inform evidence-based guidelines.

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