The Sleep Clinic of America team is currently recruiting patients experiencing insomnia for a study, whether it’s difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep. If you or a family member struggles with insomnia, know that effective treatments are available without the need for sleeping pills.
We are offering free therapy to qualified participants who register by February 28, 2025.
Scroll down for full details. Don’t miss out—sign up today, as space is limited!
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia
This treatment is called Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia. Through this treatment, patients will learn healthy sleeping habits that will allow them to reset their sleep patterns and start enjoying restorative sleep without sleeping pills.
Relearn How to Sleep
Studies have proven that sleeping pills only add an average of 30 minutes of sleep and have significant long-term side effects. CBT-I is drug-free, safe, and provides sustainable long-term management for insomnia.
Once your application is submitted, a staff member will contact the patient to do a pre-screening. Please see the information below, showing the American College of Physicians’ recommendation to use CBT-I for insomnia as the preferred treatment, not sleeping pills.
How the Study is Conducted
Consultations are done via telemedicine with a medical provider, allowing you to participate comfortably from your own home. To join, you’ll need a computer, tablet, or mobile phone capable of video calls, equipped with a functioning camera, speakers, and microphone.
The American College of Physician's Guideline
The American College of Physicians (ACP) developed this guideline to present the evidence and provide clinical recommendations on managing chronic insomnia disorder in adults.
Methods
This guideline is based on a systematic review of randomized, controlled trials published in English from 2004 through September 2015.
Evaluated outcomes included global outcomes assessed by questionnaires, patient-reported sleep outcomes, and harms.
The target audience for this guideline includes all clinicians, and the target patient population includes adults with chronic insomnia disorder.
This guideline grades the evidence and recommendations using the ACP grading system, which is based on the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach.
Recommendation One
ACP recommends that all adult patients receive cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) as the initial treatment for chronic insomnia disorder. (Grade: strong recommendation, moderate-quality evidence)
Recommendation Two
ACP recommends that clinicians use a shared decision-making approach, including discussing the benefits, harms, and costs of short-term use of medications, to decide whether to add pharmacological therapy in adults with chronic insomnia disorder in whom cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) alone was unsuccessful. (Grade: weak recommendation, low-quality evidence)
Space for the study is limited to the first 30 eligible participants.
Participate in the study and receive CBT-I treatment for your insomnia at no cost to you.