Allison T. Siebern
Key Documents
Contact Information
-
Clinical Offices
Stanford Sleep Medicine Center 450 Broadway St Pavilion C, 2nd Flr, MC:5704 Redwood City, CA 94063 Tel Work (650) 721-7558 Fax (650) 721-3468
- Academic Offices
Personal Information EmailNot for medical emergencies or patient use
Professional Overview
Clinical Focus
- Non-pharmacological Treatment of Insomnia
- Circadian Rhythm Disorders
- CPAP Adherence
- Sleep Medicine
- Psychology
Administrative Appointments
- Co-Program Director, Behavioral Sleep Medicine Fellowship Training, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences (2012 - present)
- Associate Director, Insomnia & Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program, Stanford Sleep Medicine Center (2010 - present)
Professional Education
| Fellowship: | Stanford Hospital & Clinics -Room HC 435 CA (04/18/2010) |
| Board Certificate: | American Board of Sleep Medicine, Behavioral Sleep Medicine (2010) |
| Medical Education: | Nova Southeastern University FL (08/2008) |
| Internship: | Miami Children's Hospital FL (08/2008) |
Graduate & Fellowship Program Affiliations
Scientific Focus
Current Research Interests
Research interests are focused on the study of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTi) treatment outcome, modification of CBTi and use in special populations, treatment development, and evaluation of clinical factors in early remission and relapse prevention. Additional area of research interest includes development of an integrated model of care for improved CPAP adherence outcomes.
Publications
- Clinical significance of night-to-night sleep variability in insomnia. Sleep Med. 2012
- Dissemination of CBTI to the Non-Sleep Specialist: Protocol Development and Training Issues. J Clin Sleep Med. 2012; (2): 209-18
- CBT for insomnia in patients with high and low depressive symptom severity: adherence and clinical outcomes. J Clin Sleep Med. 2011; (6): 645-52
- New developments in cognitive behavioral therapy as the first-line treatment of insomnia. Psychol Res Behav Manag. 2011: 21-8
- Insomnia and its effective non-pharmacologic treatment. Med Clin North Am. 2010; (3): 581-91
