Examining the Contrast Avoidance Model to Understand the Association between Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Sleep Difficulties
Whitney S. Shepherd, Mary J. Schadegg, Laura J. Dixon

TL;DR
This study explores how anxiety-related worry patterns may contribute to sleep problems in people with generalized anxiety disorder.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that contrast avoidance partially explains the link between GAD severity and sleep difficulties.
Findings
Contrast avoidance was significantly correlated with sleep difficulties.
GAD severity indirectly influenced sleep difficulties through contrast avoidance.
The mediation model explained 28% of the variance in sleep difficulties.
Abstract
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) features excessive worry, paired with physiological arousal that causes distress and interferes with daily activities. Individuals with GAD symptoms often experience persistent sleep problems, which may worsen clinical outcomes. The Contrast Avoidance Model (CAM; Newman & Llera, 2011) posits that worry is used in GAD to avoid emotional shifts by perpetuating a negative state. Research has demonstrated the CAM uniquely explains GAD pathology and may similarly explain co-occurring sleep difficulties. To better understand the high rates of sleep difficulties in GAD symptomology, this study examined the role of contrast avoidance in this relationship in a sample of individuals with anxiety symptoms. Greater contrast avoidance was expected to be positively correlated with sleep difficulties, and GAD severity was expected to be indirectly associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Sleep and related disorders · Mental Health Research Topics
