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Using benzodiazepines and Z-drugs for managing primary insomnia in adults in Saudi Arabia: an e-Delphi study to aid the development of clinical guidelines

Using benzodiazepines and Z-drugs for managing primary insomnia in adults in Saudi Arabia: an e-Delphi study to aid the development of clinical guidelines
Using benzodiazepines and Z-drugs for managing primary insomnia in adults in Saudi Arabia: an e-Delphi study to aid the development of clinical guidelines
Purpose: this study aims to obtain consensus statements required for the development of clinical guidelines for the use of benzodiazepines (BZDs) and Z-drugs for the management of primary insomnia in adults in Saudi Arabia.

Methods: three rounds of the e-Delphi technique using a Bristol Online Survey (BOS) were conducted between May and August 2018. The Director of the Saudi Sleep Medicine Group helped recruit the country’s sleep medicine experts. Snowballing was used to forward invitation emails, information sheets, and the survey to known sleep medicine experts and physicians deemed to be interested in the field. All participants’ details were anonymised except to the researcher.

Results: fifteen experts from four different regions and specialities in Saudi Arabia participated in Round 1. Twenty-one statements originated from participants’ responses. In Round 2, there were 17 respondents and 16 of the statements obtained the required consensus of 70% or higher. Eleven experts participated in Round 3 and eight statements received 100% agreement, two received 91%, and six received 82%. Having obtained the required consensus of 80% or higher in Round 3, these 16 statements fulfilled the criteria to be included in future guidelines. The five statements that failed to attain the required consensus were rejected as inappropriate for inclusion in Saudi Arabian clinical guidelines.

Conclusions: the items that achieved the required consensus can be included in future guidelines for the use of BZDs and Z-drugs in the treatment of primary insomnia in adults to standardize best practices in sleep medicine in Saudi Arabia.
1520-9512
113-1139
Dobia, Ali
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Ryan, Kath
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BaHammam, Ahmed S.
86d668e7-6d7e-48a3-9695-bec7fdc992d0
Edwards, Alexander
bc3d9b93-a533-4144-937b-c673d0a28879
Dobia, Ali
7b62bd74-d399-4a42-a7db-5c0b06c14c5a
Ryan, Kath
e223e5c6-07a5-45ad-918c-bac6e8ece275
BaHammam, Ahmed S.
86d668e7-6d7e-48a3-9695-bec7fdc992d0
Edwards, Alexander
bc3d9b93-a533-4144-937b-c673d0a28879

Dobia, Ali, Ryan, Kath, BaHammam, Ahmed S. and Edwards, Alexander (2019) Using benzodiazepines and Z-drugs for managing primary insomnia in adults in Saudi Arabia: an e-Delphi study to aid the development of clinical guidelines. Sleep and Breathing, 23, 113-1139. (doi:10.1007/s11325-019-01794-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: this study aims to obtain consensus statements required for the development of clinical guidelines for the use of benzodiazepines (BZDs) and Z-drugs for the management of primary insomnia in adults in Saudi Arabia.

Methods: three rounds of the e-Delphi technique using a Bristol Online Survey (BOS) were conducted between May and August 2018. The Director of the Saudi Sleep Medicine Group helped recruit the country’s sleep medicine experts. Snowballing was used to forward invitation emails, information sheets, and the survey to known sleep medicine experts and physicians deemed to be interested in the field. All participants’ details were anonymised except to the researcher.

Results: fifteen experts from four different regions and specialities in Saudi Arabia participated in Round 1. Twenty-one statements originated from participants’ responses. In Round 2, there were 17 respondents and 16 of the statements obtained the required consensus of 70% or higher. Eleven experts participated in Round 3 and eight statements received 100% agreement, two received 91%, and six received 82%. Having obtained the required consensus of 80% or higher in Round 3, these 16 statements fulfilled the criteria to be included in future guidelines. The five statements that failed to attain the required consensus were rejected as inappropriate for inclusion in Saudi Arabian clinical guidelines.

Conclusions: the items that achieved the required consensus can be included in future guidelines for the use of BZDs and Z-drugs in the treatment of primary insomnia in adults to standardize best practices in sleep medicine in Saudi Arabia.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 January 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 February 2019
Published date: December 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502229
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502229
ISSN: 1520-9512
PURE UUID: 74a50c19-f6c1-4698-88e8-b2dee4f902dc
ORCID for Alexander Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2369-989X

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Date deposited: 18 Jun 2025 16:45
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:39

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Contributors

Author: Ali Dobia
Author: Kath Ryan
Author: Ahmed S. BaHammam
Author: Alexander Edwards ORCID iD

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