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Gerhard Klösch

Institute for Consciousness and Dream Research, Vienna, Austria.

3 papers in the library · 91 citations · publishing 2015-2021

Papers

Studies with lucid dreaming as add-on therapy to Gestalt therapy

Acta Neurologica Scandinavica January 30, 2015 Brigitte Holzinger, Gerhard Klösch, B. Saletu 59 citations

Adding lucid dreaming training to Gestalt therapy reduces nightmare frequency more quickly and to a greater extent than Gestalt therapy alone. Thirty-two people who had nightmares at least twice a week were randomly assigned to ten weeks of either Gestalt therapy alone or Gestalt therapy plus lucid dreaming instruction. Both groups reported significantly fewer nightmares after treatment and at a three-month follow-up. Only the group receiving Gestalt therapy alone showed a significant drop in dream recall frequency. Sleep quality improved significantly for both groups at follow-up, but only the lucid dreaming group showed significant improvement immediately after therapy ended.

Cognitions in Sleep: Lucid Dreaming as an Intervention for Nightmares in Patients With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2020 Brigitte Holzinger, Bernd Saletu, Gerhard Klösch 30 citations

Lucid dreaming therapy (LDT) did not improve sleep quality or reduce nightmare severity in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but it significantly decreased levels of anxiety and depression. About 80% of PTSD patients suffer from nightmares or dysphoric dreams. LDT teaches dreamers to become aware of and control dream content, offering a potential alternative or complementary treatment for PTSD-related anxiety and depression, even though it had no effect on sleep variables or the PTSD profile measured by the Impact of Events Scale.

Case Report: Why Sleep and Dream Related Psychological Treatments, Such as Sleepcoaching (According to Holzinger&Klösch) and CBT-I Should Be Implemented in Treatment Concepts in the Public Health System-Description of the Nightmare Treatment Process in the Context of PTSD.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2021 Brigitte Holzinger, Franziska Nierwetberg, Gerhard Klösch 2 citations

A woman with severe PTSD and recurrent nightmares completed six weeks of lucid dreaming training, which enabled her to alter her dream plots and improve several psychological measures. Her dream reports and assessment results are presented. The authors argue that sleep and nightmares should receive more attention in psychiatric treatment, not only for PTSD patients, and support their case with literature on non-medication treatments for sleep problems.