Insomnia: Causes and Natural Solutions
Insomnia affects 15-20% of the adult population and is the most common sleep disorder. It is characterized by difficulty falling asleep, nighttime awakenings or early morning awakening, with daytime functioning impact. This article explores the multifactorial causes and validated natural solutions: sleep hygiene, herbal medicine, sophrology, cognitive-behavioral techniques and mind-body approaches.
Introduction
Chronic insomnia — defined as sleep difficulties at least 3 nights per week for over 3 months — affects approximately 10% of adults (DSM-5). Its consequences extend far beyond fatigue: it increases the risk of depression (2-4x), anxiety, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes and accidents.
Types of Insomnia
- Sleep-onset insomnia: latency over 30 minutes. Often linked to anxiety or circadian phase delay.
- Sleep-maintenance insomnia: frequent nighttime awakenings. May relate to pain, sleep apnea or stress.
- Early morning awakening: definitive awakening well before desired time. Often associated with depression.
Causes: The 3P Model
- Predisposing: constitutional neurophysiological hyperactivation, anxious traits, family history.
- Precipitating: triggering event (bereavement, job loss, illness, trauma).
- Perpetuating: maladaptive compensatory behaviors — excessive time in bed, irregular schedules, screens, alcohol as "sleep aid," performance anxiety.
CBT-I: First-Line Treatment
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia is recommended as first-line by AASM, NICE and HAS. Superior to sleeping pills long-term, without side effects. Components: sleep restriction, stimulus control, cognitive restructuring, sleep hygiene and relaxation. Typically 4-8 sessions (Trauer et al., 2015 meta-analysis).
Complementary Natural Solutions
- Herbal medicine: valerian, passionflower, lemon balm, hops, California poppy.
- Sophrology: dynamic relaxation, controlled breathing, positive visualization.
- Cardiac coherence: 5 minutes before bedtime (6 breaths/minute).
- Hypnosis: reducing sleep performance anxiety, facilitating sleep transition.
- Mindfulness: Black et al. (2015, JAMA Internal Medicine) showed significant sleep quality improvement.
Disclaimer
This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Persistent insomnia requires medical evaluation. Sleeping pills should only be used under medical prescription for limited duration. Natural approaches do not replace medical follow-up.
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.