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      Worry among Latinx college students: relations to anxious arousal, social anxiety, general depression, and insomnia

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          A cognitive model of insomnia.

          Insomnia is one of the most prevalent psychological disorders, causing sufferers severe distress as well as social, interpersonal, and occupational impairment. Drawing on well-validated cognitive models of the anxiety disorders as well as on theoretical and empirical work highlighting the contribution of cognitive processes to insomnia, this paper presents a new cognitive model of the maintenance of insomnia. It is suggested that individuals who suffer from insomnia tend to be overly worried about their sleep and about the daytime consequences of not getting enough sleep. This excessive negatively toned cognitive activity triggers both autonomic arousal and emotional distress. It is proposed that this anxious state triggers selective attention towards and monitoring of internal and external sleep-related threat cues. Together, the anxious state and the attentional processes triggered by it tricks the individual into overestimating the extent of the perceived deficit in sleep and daytime performance. It is suggested that the excessive negatively toned cognitive activity will be fuelled if a sleep-related threat is detected or a deficit perceived. Counterproductive safety behaviours (including thought control, imagery control, emotional inhibition, and difficulty problem solving) and erroneous beliefs about sleep and the benefits of worry are highlighted as exacerbating factors. The unfortunate consequence of this sequence of events is that the excessive and escalating anxiety may culminate in a real deficit in sleep and daytime functioning. The literature providing preliminary support for the model is reviewed and the clinical implications and limitations discussed.
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            Development and validation of the penn state worry questionnaire

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              Meta-Cognition and Worry: A Cognitive Model of Generalized Anxiety Disorder

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of American College Health
                Journal of American College Health
                Informa UK Limited
                0744-8481
                1940-3208
                July 04 2021
                November 08 2019
                July 04 2021
                : 69
                : 5
                : 529-536
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Psychology, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA
                [2 ]Department of Behavioral Science, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA
                [3 ]HEALTH Institute, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA
                [4 ]Psychotherapeutic Area of “Asociación Ayuda”, Anxiety Disorders Clinic (Buenos Aires), Argentina
                Article
                10.1080/07448481.2019.1686004
                31702977
                b3f35c40-9124-4d73-88c1-2c11b3528ff8
                © 2021
                History

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