How Insomnia and Depression Are Linked

The good news is that treating one can improve both

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The good news is that treating one can improve both

A few months into the pandemic, Héctor González*, 57, visited the Álava Reyes Psychology Centre in Madrid. He had developed insomnia in response to the widespread fear and uncertainty.

According to the centre’s director, psychologist María Jesús Álava Reyes, the corporate executive would fall asleep easily at bedtime but awaken two or three hours later with worrisome thoughts that kept him restless. Eventually he’d nod off, then arise for the day two hours early, preoccupied with negative thoughts. Over time, the lack of sleep soured his mood and his ability to function.

“Insomnia produced very high levels of anxiety, which led to frequent frustration, and a weariness that ended up leading to depression,” says Álava Reyes about González.

Thomas Müller-Rörich, who lives near Stuggaany, showed that insomnia doubles the risk of developing depression compared with those who have no sleep difficulties. And in 2020, follow-up research found that the conditions have a bi-directional relationship, and that early treatment for insomnia may help to prevent depression, although more study is needed.

Both insomnia and depression affect many across the world. In 2019, according to the Fitbit sleep data insights from across 18 countries, Indians were the second most sleep-deprived population in the world, after the Japanese. The India State-Level Disease Burden Initiative study, published in The Lancet Psychiatry in 2017, found that roughly one in seven Indians, or 197 million people, suffered from mental disorders. Of these, 45.7 million had depression.

“Sleep disorders and depression often occur together,” says psychotherapist and somnologist DrHans-Günter Weess, head of the Interdisciplinary Sleep Centre of Pfalzklinikumin Klingenmünster, Germany. “Up to 80 per cent of depressions are accompanied by sleep...

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