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Ambien should be replaced by talk therapy

Looking around the journals published so far in 2010, it’s clear the research community is finally beginning to challenge the assumption that America should be medicated. If you listen to the pharmaceutical industry and the doctors who are paid to stand up and promote drugs as the best treatment for any disorder, you will hear a consistent pattern of propaganda. All our products have the FDA seal of approval. The clinical trials show our products are safe and effective. The health insurance industry pays most of the price for our products (only a small co-payment element for you). Take our pills and get better. Indeed, when it comes to the top-selling sleeping pills, there are record numbers of prescriptions being written by doctors. The reason? Well, its not hard to suspect stress levels are increasing thanks to the recession. Unemployment is high. Credit levels have been reduced, There are foreclosures in every neighborhood. That’s bound to make sleep more difficult. What’s curious about the new records being set in the number of prescriptions is the additional financial burden this places on families when they can least afford it, and the implied assumption that sleeping pills can cure the underlying social and economic problems causing the stress.

The Journal of the American Medical Association reports talk therapy is more effective than sleeping pills. The research team gave the participants sleeping pills alongside therapy sessions and measured which had the better outcome. Because the talk asked why people were finding it difficult to sleep and discussed ways of resolving problems, people with the therapy sessions had better sleep than those on pills. This follows on research testing the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) which teaches people how to change their habit patterns to restore sleep. Therapists encourage people to avoid naps during the day, adopt a set routine for going to bed, and physically change the bedroom to minimize light and noise that might disturb sleep. When combined with techniques to address the cause of stress and relax, CBT has consistently been found to outperform sleeping pills.

When you look at the statistics, there can be little doubt we use too many sleeping pills. Add in the increasing use of online pharmacies which supply drugs without the need for a prescription, and the scale of reliance on sleeping pills is almost certainly worse than we imagine. Why should we care? Because all the sleeping pills on the market can cause dependence. As people continue to take them, tolerance builds and the pills actually become less effective. Increasing the dose confirms the dependence and can lead to unwanted side effects. Yes, ambien is one of the better pills and there are fewer problems with its use, but if your insomnia has been disrupting your life for six months or more, you should consider undergoing therapy first. CBT is clearly the best. To help you focus during this learning period, your doctor may offer the use of a sleeping pill. If you decide to accept, ambien is the best but you should only take it for a few weeks at low dose. The long-term restoration of sleep is going to come from the therapy. Although this is a short-term cost to meet, your life will improve with natural sleep and your finances will be better of without having to buy sleeping pills for the rest of your life.

Ambien is a world class sleeping pill

As a nation, it seems we pop more pills than all the other developed countries. The people who count things release the number of prescriptions written each year, and painkillers and sleeping pills are always racing ahead of the field for that Number 1 spot. It’s strange we should find sleep a problem – that’s not just falling asleep, it’s also staying asleep long enough to feel the benefit the next morning. Why should something that comes so naturally as young children become so difficult for some as they grow older? The answers are long and complicated, varying with changes in lifestyles and habits to the places where we live becoming more noisy. One thing is clear. Sleeping pills are now an integral part of our culture. You will see references to them wherever you look, whether as ads on TV or the media, or as throw-away lines. For example, when Lacey was kicked out of American Idol, her performance of “Ruby Tuesday” was promoted as a “safer alternative to sleeping pills”. And that’s before we get to the high-powered celebrities like Tiger Woods. Here’s a man who has proved to be a walking-encyclopedia on addiction. No longer the tame, clean-living golfing hero, he’s the sex addict with multiple mistresses in every town on the professional tour. Perhaps we should not have been surprised. Top male sporting stars have always had to walk the gauntlet of women offering their services. The PR surrounding Woods seemed to suggest he rose above the temptations. As it is, he’s had to book into sex therapy to try to rescue his marriage. More to the taste of the gossip-mongers was the news that many of his sessions with these mistresses were enhanced by the use of drugs. Contrary to expectations, it seems Woods found sex more exciting when he was fighting the effects of sleeping pills. Many ordinary people reach the climax, ejaculate and then fall asleep. Woods was racing to get to the climax before he fell asleep. That really would make for crazy sex. In any event, he’s now in rehab for addiction to sleeping pills and painkillers. With all this therapy and no practice, it’s surprising he’s announced he’s going to start playing again. Going cold turkey on the golf course in front of the TV cameras will make for exciting viewing. All this should be a kind of warning to us all. In a sensible society, we would not be discussing whether you really do get crazy sex when you take ambien and then get into action. It’s faintly perverse to believe a drug designed to send you to sleep enhances your experiences if you fight it to stay awake. It’s far better to discuss why our society has become addicted to sleeping pills. What does it say about our lifestyles and the levels of stress we have to endure, if the majority of people who live and work in this country have to rely on medication to get to sleep? The statistics collected on the national economy show increasingly poor levels of productivity. Looking around the workplaces every morning gives you one of the reasons why. People come into work looking and acting like the living dead. Even when ambien is introduced into the equation, there’s only some improvement. The sleep induced by pills is not natural sleep. It does not refresh in the same way as natural sleep. As a short-term measure, ambien is great. If insomnia persists, you should get a different type of help to overcome the problem.