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Hinterberger, A., Eigl, E.-S., Szeko, A., Topalidis, P. I. & Schabus, M., (2025), Continuous sleep tracking in digital CBT-I: Efficacy and insights from a naturalistic-environment study

In: International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology. 25, 4, 100646.

Abstract

Background

Insomnia is highly prevalent, yet few receive cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) due to limited treatment availability. Unguided digital CBT-I offers an accessible alternative to traditional face-to-face therapy. Research in this area often relies on either subjective sleep measurements (e.g., sleep diaries) or controlled single-night lab studies. This study examines the effectiveness of a novel app-based CBT-I program combining therapy with continuous subjective and objective sleep tracking via a heart rate (HR) sensor in a naturalistic setting.

Methods

Eighty-eight participants (56.8 % female) aged 20–85 years (M = 49.9 ± 13.10) completed an 8-week app-based CBT-I intervention with continuous sleep tracking (sleep diaries and HR sensor), followed by a 2-week follow-up. Assessments at baseline, post-intervention, and follow-up included sleep related problems, psychological strain, quality of life, and dysfunctional beliefs.

Results

Insomnia prevalence dropped from 92 % at pre-intervention to 67 % at follow-up. Improvements were observed in subjective sleep quality (p < .001, r = 0.59), dysfunctional beliefs (p < .001, r = 0.48), quality of life (p’s < .002, r’s > 0.33), psychological strain (p < .001, r = 0.43), depression (p = .010, r = 0.27), and anxiety (p = .003, r = 0.32). While sleep diary data showed improvements in various sleep parameters, objective data revealed statistical trends towards a reduced total sleep time (TST; p = .083, r = 0.19), driven by sleep restriction, and light sleep (p = .089, r = 0.18). Using continuous sleep monitoring we additionally found relevant changes during the intervention levels for subjective wake after sleep onset, sleep efficiency as well as objective TST.

Conclusion

Findings support the effectiveness of app-based CBT-I and suggest that continuous objective sleep tracking over weeks can reveal previously undetected sleep and well-being improvements in real-world settings.

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