(Press-News.org) DARIEN, IL – A new study is the first to show decreases in health care utilization and costs following brief treatment with cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTI).
	Results show that sleep improved in 86 percent of insomnia patients who completed at least three sessions of CBTI. In the six months following treatment, health care utilization decreased and health care-related costs were reduced by more than $200 on average among treatment completers.
	"Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia is a highly effective treatment, and this study shows that a relatively brief intervention also may have a positive economic impact," said principal investigator Christina McCrae, PhD, associate professor of clinical and health psychology at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Fla.  "Insomnia remains an undertreated disorder, and brief cognitive behavioral therapy can help to increase access to care and reduce the burden of insomnia."
	The study results appear in the Feb. 15 issue of the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, which is published by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.
	"Each year in the U.S. millions of prescriptions are filled and billions of dollars are spent to treat insomnia," said Society of Behavioral Sleep Medicine President Michael T. Smith, PhD.  "This study reaffirms that cognitive behavioral therapy is clinically effective, and it provides promising new evidence that even brief treatment with CBTI may reduce health care utilization costs."
	Together with colleagues from the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System and Drexel University in Philadelphia, McCrae reviewed medical records of 84 outpatients treated in a behavioral sleep medicine clinic based in an accredited sleep disorders center.  Components of the treatment included sleep education, sleep hygiene, stimulus control therapy, sleep restriction, a 10-minute relaxation exercise, and cognitive therapy. Up to six weekly treatment sessions were led by clinical psychology graduate students and predoctoral interns.  Several indicators of health care utilization and costs were measured over a six-month period prior to and following treatment:   number of physician office visits, costs related to office visits, number of medications, and estimated health care costs and utilization.
	The authors noted that the cost of brief treatment with CBTI – about $460 in the study - may negate the short-term savings produced in the first six months after treatment.  However, the advantage of CBTI is that the effects are long-lasting, which means that there are no ongoing treatment costs.  Therefore, CBTI has the potential to produce substantial long-term savings, especially when individual results are extrapolated to the large population of insomnia patients in the health care system.
INFORMATION:
Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia can reduce health care utilization and costs
As few as 3 treatment sessions can produce significant health care savings
2014-02-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Is truth stranger than fiction? Yes, especially for science fiction
2014-02-15
CHICAGO – From warp drives to hyperspace, science fiction has continuously borrowed from, and sometimes anticipated, the state of the art in scientific progress. This has resulted in the perception that science and science fiction have a causal relationship, one finding direction from and fulfilling the science fantasy laid out before it. 
	But that is rarely the case, according to Lawrence Krauss, a Foundation professor in the School of Space and Earth Exploration and the Department of Physics at Arizona State University. No doubt, science fiction has taken inspiration ...
Citizenship education goes digital
2014-02-15
WACO, Texas (Feb. 14, 2014) --Can playing online video games help students learn civics education? According to Baylor University researchers, the answer is yes.
	Brooke Blevins, Ph.D., assistant professor of curriculum and instruction and Karon LeCompte, Ph.D., assistant professor of curriculum and instruction in Baylor's School of Education studied the effectiveness of iCivics, a free online website founded by retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor that teaches civics concepts using 19 educational games.
	The study, published in The Journal of Social Studies ...
Scripps researchers recommend mobile compression device to prevent DVT after joint surgery
2014-02-15
LA JOLLA, Calif. – Research from The Shiley Center for Orthopaedic Research and Education at Scripps Clinic could change how patients are treated to prevent blood clots after joint replacement surgery. A study published as the lead article in the current issue of the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery determined that after lower extremity joint replacement surgery a mobile compression device was just as effective as blood thinners in preventing deep vein thrombosis (DVT), but without negative side effects including bleeding complications.
	The multicenter study, led by ...
Clinical trial success influenced by biomarker- and receptor-targeted therapies in NSCLC
2014-02-15
DENVER – Over the past decade, a great clinical focus has been directed at developing new and innovative therapies for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). An analysis of clinical trials evaluating these therapies demonstrates that the cumulative success rate for new agents for advanced NSCLC is lower than the industry-estimated rate. However, biomarker- and receptor-targeted therapies were found to substantially increase clinical trial success. 
	The analysis was designed to evaluate the risk of clinical trial failure in advanced (stage IIIb-IV) NSCLC drug development ...
High frequency of EGFR mutations found in Asian population
2014-02-15
DENVER – Adenocarcinoma histology, female sex, never-smoking status, and Asian ethnicity have been considered the most important factors associated with EGFR mutations in non-small cell lung cancer and response to EGFR inhibitors. A recent study has found that, within the Asian population, the frequency of EGFR mutations associated with other demographic and clinical characteristics is higher than previously reported, even in patients with a history of smoking, suggesting that mutation testing should be done on a broader basis among Asian patients with advanced adenocarcinoma ...
MLB largely responsible for players' steroid abuse, UTA researcher says
2014-02-15
The widespread use of illegal steroids among Major League Baseball players has been fueled by an "economy of bodily management," the free agent market and exploding television revenues, a UT Arlington assistant professor argues in a newly published research paper.
Sarah Rose, a labor and disability historian, says by attacking individual ballplayers' morality, commentators have obscured the more salient issue.
"Baseball is representative of the fact that Americans increasingly live in an age of biotechnology in which bodily modification for profit has become the norm ...
Child obesity: Cues and don'ts
2014-02-15
Among the multiple factors that can cause obesity is an abnormal neurocognitive or behavioral response to food cues. The brain becomes wired to seek – and expect – greater rewards from food, which leads to unhealthful overeating.
	Attention modification programs, which train a person to ignore or disregard specific, problematic cues or triggers, have been used effectively to treat cases of anxiety and substance abuse. In a novel study published this week in the journal Appetite, Kerri Boutelle, PhD, professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at the University of California, ...
Scientists discover the mechanism of heart failure in fish exposed to oil spills
2014-02-14
Think of an oil spill, and images of fouled beaches and oil-soaked seabirds come to mind. But there are less visible effects as well. For instance, even low levels of oil pollution can damage the developing hearts of fish embryos and larvae, reducing the likelihood that those fish will survive. Scientists have known of this effect for some time, but the underlying mechanism has remained elusive.
Recently, researchers from NOAA Fisheries partnered with a team from Stanford University to discover how oil-derived chemicals disrupt the normal functioning of the heart muscle ...
Screening wastewater biosolids for environmental contaminants
2014-02-14
DURHAM, N.C. -- Every year waste treatment facilities in the United States process more than eight million tons of semi-solid sewage called biosolids -- about half of which is recycled into fertilizer and spread on crop land. 
	The practice helps solve storage issues and produces revenue to support the treatment plants, but what else is being spread in that sludge?  
	As industry invents new materials and chemicals for modern products, many find their way to our skin and bloodstream and, subsequently, into our sinks and toilet bowls. More than 500 different organic chemicals ...
Researchers find brain's 'sweet spot' for love in neurological patient
2014-02-14
A region deep inside the brain controls how quickly people make decisions about love, according to new research at the University of Chicago.
	The finding, made in an examination of a 48-year-old man who suffered a stroke, provides the first causal clinical evidence that an area of the brain called the anterior insula "plays an instrumental role in love," said UChicago neuroscientist Stephanie Cacioppo, lead author of the study.
	In an earlier paper that analyzed research on the topic, Cacioppo and colleagues defined love as "an intentional state for intense [and long-term] ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Three health tech innovators recognized for digital solutions to transform cardiovascular care
A sequence of human rights violations precedes mass atrocities, new research shows
Genetic basis of spring-loaded spider webs
Seeing persuasion in the brain
Allen Institute announces 2025 Next Generation Leaders
Digital divide narrows but gaps remain for Australians as GenAI use surges
Advanced molecular dynamics simulations capture RNA folding with high accuracy
Chinese Neurosurgical Journal Study unveils absorbable skull device that speeds healing
Heatwave predictions months in advance with machine learning: A new study delivers improved accuracy and efficiency
2.75-million-year-old stone tools may mark a turning point in human evolution
Climate intervention may not be enough to save coffee, chocolate and wine, new study finds
Advanced disease modelling shows some gut bacteria can spread as rapidly as viruses
Depletion of Ukraine’s soils threatens long-term global food security
Hornets in town: How top predators coexist
Transgender women do not have an increased risk of heart attack and stroke
Unexpectedly high concentrations of forever chemicals found in dead sea otters
Stress hormones silence key brain genes through chromatin-bound RNAs, study reveals
Groundbreaking review reveals how gut microbiota influences sleep disorders through the brain-gut axis
Breakthrough catalyst turns carbon dioxide into essential ingredient for clean fuels
New survey reveals men would rather sit in traffic than talk about prostate health
Casual teachers left behind: New study calls for better induction and support in schools
Adapting to change is the real key to unlocking GenAI’s potential, ECU research shows
How algae help corals bounce back after bleaching
Decoding sepsis: Unraveling key signaling pathways for targeted therapies
Lithium‑ion dynamic interface engineering of nano‑charged composite polymer electrolytes for solid‑state lithium‑metal batteries
Personalised care key to easing pain for people with Parkinson’s
UV light holds promise for energy-efficient desalination
Scientists discover new way to shape what a stem cell becomes
Global move towards plant-based diets could reshape farming jobs and reduce labor costs worldwide, Oxford study finds
New framework helps balance conservation and development in cold regions
[Press-News.org] Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia can reduce health care utilization and costsAs few as 3 treatment sessions can produce significant health care savings




