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Insomnia

Insomnia is more than a bad night of sleep. It can involve difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early—often with daytime fatigue, low energy, irritability, and reduced focus. When sleep problems become persistent, they can affect mood, performance, and overall health. Effective treatment can help restore more consistent, restorative sleep.

Overview

Insomnia is a sleep disorder characterized by ongoing difficulty with sleep onset, sleep maintenance, or early-morning awakening—along with daytime impairment. Some people struggle to fall asleep; others wake frequently or wake too early and can’t return to sleep.

Insomnia can be short-term (related to a stressful period) or chronic (lasting months or longer). It often overlaps with anxiety, depression, PTSD, chronic stress, medical conditions, and certain medications. A careful evaluation helps identify contributing factors and guide a treatment plan that improves sleep quality and daytime functioning.

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Symptoms

Insomnia often affects both nighttime sleep and daytime functioning. Symptoms may vary, but persistent patterns are important to address.
  • Difficulty falling asleep
    Taking a long time to fall asleep most nights.
  • Waking during the night
    Frequent awakenings or trouble returning to sleep.
  • Waking too early
    Early-morning awakening with inability to fall back asleep.
  • Non-restorative sleep
    Sleeping but still feeling unrefreshed.
  • Daytime fatigue or low energy
    Feeling drained, sluggish, or needing naps.
  • Trouble concentrating
    Brain fog, reduced attention, or memory issues.
  • Irritability or mood changes
    Increased stress sensitivity, frustration, or sadness.
  • Anxiety about sleep
    Worrying about sleep can worsen insomnia over time.
  • Reduced performance
    Impaired work, school, or daily functioning.
  • Reliance on sleep aids or alcohol
    Using substances to sleep may create rebound sleep issues.

Causes & Risk Factors

Insomnia often develops from a mix of stress, habits, schedule factors, and underlying medical or mental health contributors. Identifying the drivers helps create an effective plan.

  • Stress, burnout, or major life changes
  • Anxiety, depression, PTSD, or chronic hyperarousal
  • Irregular sleep schedule or shift work
  • Excessive screen time or stimulating activity before bed
  • Caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, or stimulant use
  • Pain, reflux, frequent urination, or other medical issues
  • Medications that affect sleep (in some individuals)
  • Sleep apnea or restless legs symptoms (may require specialty evaluation)
  • Napping patterns that reduce nighttime sleep drive
  • Learned “sleep effort” and worry about sleep

Diagnosis

Insomnia is diagnosed through a clinical evaluation that reviews sleep patterns, duration of symptoms, daytime impact, stressors, sleep schedule, and habits. A provider may also ask about snoring, breathing interruptions, restless legs, and other sleep-related symptoms that could suggest conditions such as sleep apnea.

Because insomnia commonly overlaps with anxiety, depression, trauma-related symptoms, and medication effects, careful assessment helps identify what is driving the sleep problem. The goal is to improve sleep without creating dependence on short-term fixes and to address underlying contributors when present.

Treatment

Insomnia treatment is individualized and often focuses on improving sleep consistency, reducing nighttime arousal, and strengthening healthy sleep patterns.

CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia)

CBT-I is one of the most effective treatments for chronic insomnia. It targets habits and thought patterns that keep insomnia going and helps rebuild consistent sleep.

Sleep Schedule and Routine Support

Establishing consistent wake times, reducing long naps, and creating a predictable wind-down routine can improve sleep quality over time.

Reducing Sleep Arousal (Mind/Body Skills)

Relaxation strategies, breathing techniques, and calming routines can reduce the “wired but tired” feeling and help the nervous system downshift.

Medication Management (When Appropriate)

In some cases, medication may be used short-term or as part of a broader plan. Your provider can review options, benefits, risks, and how to avoid dependence.

Addressing Underlying Anxiety or Mood Symptoms

Treating anxiety, depression, or trauma-related hyperarousal can significantly improve sleep when these are contributing factors.

Sleep Disorder Screening and Referral (When Needed)

If symptoms suggest sleep apnea, restless legs, or another sleep disorder, further testing or specialty referral may be recommended.

  • CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia)

    CBT-I is one of the most effective treatments for chronic insomnia. It targets habits and thought patterns that keep insomnia going and helps rebuild consistent sleep.

  • Sleep Schedule and Routine Support

    Establishing consistent wake times, reducing long naps, and creating a predictable wind-down routine can improve sleep quality over time.

  • Reducing Sleep Arousal (Mind/Body Skills)

    Relaxation strategies, breathing techniques, and calming routines can reduce the “wired but tired” feeling and help the nervous system downshift.

  • Medication Management (When Appropriate)

    In some cases, medication may be used short-term or as part of a broader plan. Your provider can review options, benefits, risks, and how to avoid dependence.

  • Addressing Underlying Anxiety or Mood Symptoms

    Treating anxiety, depression, or trauma-related hyperarousal can significantly improve sleep when these are contributing factors.

  • Sleep Disorder Screening and Referral (When Needed)

    If symptoms suggest sleep apnea, restless legs, or another sleep disorder, further testing or specialty referral may be recommended.

Frequently Asked Questions

Insomnia involves ongoing difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early, along with daytime impairment such as fatigue, low energy, irritability, or poor concentration.

Chronic insomnia typically lasts three months or longer and occurs multiple nights per week. Even shorter-term insomnia can be worth addressing if it’s affecting daily life.

CBT-I is a structured, evidence-based therapy for insomnia that helps reset sleep patterns by targeting behaviors and thoughts that maintain insomnia. It is often more effective long-term than relying on sleep medications alone.

Not always. Some medications can be helpful short-term or in specific situations, but frequent use may lead to tolerance, dependence, or rebound insomnia. A provider can help determine the safest approach.

Yes. Anxiety, depression, PTSD, pain, medications, sleep apnea, and restless legs can all contribute. A careful evaluation helps identify drivers and the best treatment plan.

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