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Conditions We Support

SleepDisorders

Tired but can't sleep? Waking at 3am and lying there for hours? You're far from alone — over 14 million people in the UK are living with undiagnosed sleep difficulties. Our specialist private doctors is here to help when the usual options haven't been enough.
14M+
estimated undiagnosed sleep disorder cases in the UK
90%
of adults surveyed reported current sleep problems
17%
of those with insomnia symptoms have received a formal diagnosis
37%
of UK adults experience insomnia
2.5M
living with sleep apnoea in the UK
10yr
average delay to narcolepsy diagnosis
7.5M
UK adults sleep under 5 hours per night
ℹ️
Medical Disclaimer: The content on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek guidance from a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical condition. Cannabis-based medicines are Prescription Only Medicines (POMs) available exclusively through licensed clinicians following individual clinical assessment. Naturecan Clinic is regulated by the Care Quality Commission (CQC). Last reviewed: May 2026.
Understanding Sleep Disorders

What are sleep disorders?

A sleep disorder is any persistent condition that disrupts the quality, timing, or duration of your sleep — and has a meaningful impact on how you function during the day. They range from difficulty falling asleep (insomnia) to breathing disruptions (sleep apnoea), to involuntary movements or sudden daytime sleep episodes.
It's important to distinguish occasional poor sleep — which most people experience at some point — from a true sleep disorder. The key markers are persistence (at least three nights per week for three months or more), distress, and daytime impairment even when you have adequate time and opportunity to sleep.
Poor sleep isn't just tiredness — it touches every part of daily life.
Clinical Definition — ICSD-3
A sleep disorder is defined as a complaint of dissatisfaction with sleep quality or duration, associated with significant distress or daytime impairment, occurring at least three nights per week, for at least three months, when adequate opportunity and circumstances for sleep are present.

Clinical evidence in this area is still developing, and results vary significantly between individuals. Whether any specific treatment is appropriate for you is a decision made entirely between you and your clinician."
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You're not imagining it.
Research shows that nearly 29% of UK adults report insomnia symptoms, but only around 6% have this recorded in their GP records. Many people go years without investigation or treatment.
(UK Biobank / BMJ Open, 2024)
Common Presentations

Types of sleep disorders

Sleep disorders come in many forms, each with distinct symptoms and patterns. Understanding which type you may be experiencing is an important first step in finding the right support.
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Insomnia

The most common sleep disorder. Insomnia involves persistent difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking too early — leaving you unrefreshed regardless of how long you spend in bed. It can be short-term (triggered by stress) or chronic (lasting three months or more). Around 37% of UK adults experience insomnia, yet only a fraction receive a diagnosis or effective insomnia treatment.
Most Common
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Sleep Apnoea

A condition in which breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep, often causing loud snoring, gasping, and fragmented rest. An estimated 2.5 million people in the UK live with obstructive sleep apnoea — and 85% are undiagnosed. Untreated, it significantly raises the risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other serious conditions.
Often Undiagnosed

Narcolepsy

A neurological condition causing sudden, uncontrollable episodes of deep sleep during the day, often with muscle weakness (cataplexy), sleep paralysis, and vivid hallucinations at sleep onset. Narcolepsy is frequently misdiagnosed as depression or epilepsy, and carries an average delay to diagnosis of over 10 years.
Severely Underdiagnosed
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Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS)

An uncontrollable urge to move the legs at rest, typically worse in the evenings. RLS makes falling asleep extremely difficult and is accompanied by uncomfortable crawling or tingling sensations. Women are twice as likely to be affected as men, and it frequently goes unrecognised in primary care for years.
Chronic Condition
1 in 6 UK adults have struggled with insomnia symptoms for over 10 years
Recognising the signs

Common symptoms

Sleep disorder symptoms extend well beyond nighttime — they reshape how you feel, think, and function throughout the day.
  • Difficulty falling asleep even when you're tired
  • Waking frequently during the night and struggling to fall back asleep
  • Waking too early and being unable to get back to sleep
  • Feeling completely unrefreshed even after a full night in bed
  • Daytime fatigue, low mood, or irritability affecting work and relationships
  • Difficulty concentrating, memory problems, or persistent brain fog
  • Loud snoring, gasping, or being told you stop breathing in your sleep
  • An irresistible urge to move your legs when lying at rest
  • Sudden overwhelming sleepiness during the day, at inappropriate moments
When should you seek help?
If sleep difficulties have persisted for three months or more, occur at least three nights per week, and are affecting your work, relationships, or wellbeing — speak to a doctor. You don't have to "push through" indefinitely, and you don't need a GP referral to access specialist support.
What's Behind It

What causes sleep disorders?

Sleep disorders rarely have a single cause. They typically emerge from a combination of biological, psychological, and lifestyle factors — and in many cases several of these interact and reinforce each other over time.
01

Psychological & Mental Health

  • Anxiety and chronic stress — a racing mind at bedtime
  • Depression and low mood disrupting sleep architecture
  • PTSD and trauma-related hyperarousal
  • Conditioned wakefulness — bed associated with frustration
  • Grief, major life events, or relationship breakdown
02

Physical Health Conditions

  • Chronic pain (bidirectional relationship with insomnia)
  • Obesity and airway anatomy (linked to sleep apnoea)
  • Neurological conditions affecting sleep-wake cycles
  • Hormonal changes — menopause, thyroid disorders
  • Acid reflux, asthma, or cardiovascular disease
03

Lifestyle & Environmental

  • Shift work and irregular schedules disrupting circadian rhythms
  • Excessive caffeine, alcohol, or screen exposure before bed
  • Noise pollution, light pollution, or "sleep poverty"
  • Jet lag or frequent travel across time zones
  • Sedentary lifestyle and low daytime activity levels
Why It Matters

The real-world impact

Poor sleep isn't simply an inconvenience. Chronic sleep disruption affects physical health, mental wellbeing, cognitive function, and even mortality risk. The longer it goes untreated, the more entrenched it tends to become — affecting every part of daily life.
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Mental Health

Persistent sleep problems significantly increase the risk of depression, anxiety, and burnout. Sleep and mental health share a bidirectional relationship — poor sleep worsens mood disorders, and mood disorders worsen sleep. "Can't sleep anxiety" is one of the most commonly searched sleep-related queries in the UK.
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Physical Health

Insufficient sleep is linked to elevated blood pressure, increased type 2 diabetes risk, weakened immunity, and cardiovascular disease. A UK Biobank study of 247,867 people found those habitually sleeping 5 hours per day had a 16% increased risk of type 2 diabetes.
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Work & Productivity

Sleep deprivation impairs concentration, decision-making, and reaction time. Three quarters of UK workers cited workplace stress as a contributor to poor sleep — and the RAND Corporation estimated sleep-related productivity losses could cost the UK billions annually.
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Relationships

Fatigue and irritability from chronic poor sleep frequently strain personal and professional relationships. Partners disturbed by snoring, restlessness, or the distress of living with someone unable to sleep properly face their own wellbeing challenges.
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Safety

Excessive daytime sleepiness significantly raises the risk of road accidents and workplace injuries. The Sleep Charity's 2024 research found people with undiagnosed sleep disorders were more likely to engage in dangerous behaviours due to impaired alertness and judgement.

Long-Term Mortality

RAND research found a 13% higher mortality risk in individuals sleeping under 6 hours per night, compared to those sleeping the recommended 7–9 hours. A consistent, restorative sleep pattern is one of the most powerful things you can do for long-term health.
+16%
increased risk of type 2 diabetes with habitually short sleep
+13%
higher all-cause mortality risk sleeping under 6 hours per night
75%
of UK workers cited workplace stress as a cause of poor sleep in the last 6 months
The Treatment Landscape

Sleep disorder & insomnia treatment options

There's no single treatment for all sleep disorders — the right approach depends on the underlying cause, severity, and individual circumstances. Treatment typically follows a stepped pathway, from foundational lifestyle changes through to specialist clinical intervention.

Clinical evidence for all treatment options, including newer approaches, varies in quality and is not universally conclusive. A specialist will weigh the evidence honestly with you.
1

Sleep Hygiene & Lifestyle Changes

The first step for most people. Sleep hygiene refers to habits that create the conditions for better sleep: consistent sleep and wake times, a cool and dark bedroom, limiting caffeine after midday, avoiding screens for 60 minutes before bed, and reducing alcohol. For mild or short-term sleep difficulties, these changes alone can be effective.
Foundation Step
2

CBT-I — Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia

NICE recommends CBT-I as the gold-standard, first-line insomnia treatment for both short-term and long-term insomnia. This structured psychological therapy identifies and changes the thought patterns and behaviours that perpetuate poor sleep — including sleep restriction, stimulus control, and cognitive restructuring. It treats root causes rather than just symptoms. CBT-I is available digitally via apps like Sleepio, but face-to-face access on the NHS is severely limited in most areas.
NICE Recommended — First Line
3

Medical Treatments & Devices

Short-term sleeping medication (z-drugs, melatonin) may be prescribed, though generally only briefly due to tolerance and dependence risks. For sleep apnoea, CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure) therapy is the standard device-based treatment. Restless legs syndrome may be managed with specific medications. A record one million people in the UK are now prescribed insomnia medication — though sleep experts often question its long-term suitability.
4

Alterantive Optons — When You Need More

For patients whose sleep disorders have persisted despite first-line treatments — or where underlying conditions are complex — alternatives might be something you consdier exploring. At Naturecan Clinic, our specialist doctors investigate co-existing conditions, review your full history, and help you build an evidence-based personalised plan. No GP referral is needed.
Naturecan Clinic Can Help Here
The NHS Reality

Why so many people don't get help

The NHS acknowledges sleep disorders as serious conditions, and NICE has clear guidance on first-line treatments. The reality is a significant gap between what patients should receive and what's actually available — creating the very conditions that drive demand for alternative treatments.
CBT-I — the most effective first-line insomnia treatment — is inaccessible across the majority of NHS Trusts. GPs typically have limited training in sleep medicine and too little appointment time to properly investigate complex presentations. Many patients are offered short-term medication and sent away.
The result: millions of people managing severe, chronic sleep disorders without adequate support — often for years or decades. If that's your experience, it reflects a system capacity problem, not a reflection of how real or serious your condition is.
12%
of NHS Trusts offer CBT-I in both face-to-face and digital formats
6 yrs+
two thirds of people with sleep problems have had them for over six years before seeking help
1M+
people in the UK are now prescribed insomnia medication — a record high
10–20%
of all GP appointments involve tiredness or fatigue as a primary complaint
The Science

The endocannabinoid system & sleep

The body's endocannabinoid system (ECS) plays a significant role in regulating sleep, mood, pain, and stress — the very systems that, when dysregulated, often underlie sleep disorders. ECS receptors (CB1 and CB2) are distributed throughout the brain regions governing sleep-wake cycles, including the hypothalamus and brainstem.
Emerging research suggests that disturbances in ECS function may contribute to chronic insomnia — particularly where anxiety, chronic pain, or PTSD are co-occurring. This has generated growing clinical interest in cannabis-based medicinal products (CBMPs) as a potential treatment consideration in sleep medicine.
Cannabis-based medicines have been legally prescribable in the UK since November 2018, when the government rescheduled them from Schedule 1 to Schedule 2 of the Misuse of Drugs Regulations 2001. They are Prescription Only Medicines (POMs) available exclusively through specialist clinicians following thorough individual assessment.
Important:
Cannabis-based medicines are not a first-line or universal treatment for sleep disorders. They may be considered by specialist clinicians only where appropriate first-line treatments have been tried and found insufficient. All prescribing decisions are made on an individual, clinical basis. This content is for education only and does not constitute medical advice.
124 patients
studied in a UK Medical Cannabis Registry analysis of insomnia — some patients reported sustained improvements in sleep quality over 18 months
71%
of patients in one published study reported improvement in sleep quality or related condition following cannabis-based medicinal treatment. Individual results vary and this does not represent expected outcomes for all patients
18 months
sustained improvement period demonstrated in the UKMCR insomnia study, including significant improvements in co-occurring anxiety symptoms
Our Private Clinic

What to expect from a sleep consultation

Specialist sleep doctors, no GP referral needed. We take time to properly understand your history, what you've already tried, and what matters most to you.
4
steps to better sleep
01
Complete a Short Eligibility Check
Answer a short set of questions about your sleep difficulties and medical history. This takes around five minutes and helps us understand whether Naturecan Clinic is the right fit for your needs.
02
Book Your Video Consultation
All appointments are conducted remotely via secure video call — no need to travel. Bookable at a time that suits you, including evenings and weekends. Accessible from anywhere in the UK.
03
Detailed Assessment with a Specialist Doctor
Your doctor will take a thorough history of your sleep patterns, overall health, and previous treatments. They'll discuss the evidence for different options and explain clearly what may or may not be appropriate for you.
04
A Personalised Plan & Ongoing Support
If treatment is appropriate, your doctor will develop a personalised plan with you. Follow-up appointments are included as part of ongoing monitoring and care — we don't just prescribe and disappear.
Who can access a consultation?
  • UK residents aged 18 or over
  • Presenting with a diagnosed or undiagnosed sleep disorder
  • Have tried at least two conventional treatment approaches
  • Have not found adequate or sustained relief from previous treatment
  • No GP referral needed — direct self-referral to our clinic
Check Your Eligibility
Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

Everything you need to know about sleep disorders, insomnia treatment, and what to expect from a consultation at Naturecan Clinic.
What are the 5 types of sleep disorders?
The five main categories of sleep disorders are: (1)
Insomnia
— difficulty falling or staying asleep; (2)
Sleep apnoea
— repeated breathing interruptions during sleep; (3)
Narcolepsy
— sudden, uncontrollable daytime sleep episodes; (4)
Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS)
— irresistible urge to move the legs at rest; and (5)
Parasomnias
— disruptive sleep behaviours such as sleepwalking or night terrors. Many people experience more than one, and conditions frequently overlap.
Why can't I sleep — even when I'm exhausted?
Being tired but unable to sleep is one of the most common presentations of insomnia — and it has a name: hyperarousal. Your nervous system remains in an alert, activated state even when your body is fatigued. The most common triggers include anxiety or stress, chronic pain, depression, disrupted circadian rhythms (from shift work or irregular schedules), and conditioned wakefulness — where the brain has learned to associate lying in bed with being awake. If this pattern has persisted for three months or more, a clinical assessment is warranted.
What counts as a sleep disorder?
A sleep disorder is any persistent condition that affects the quality, timing, or duration of your sleep to a degree that interferes with daily life. Clinicians typically diagnose it when problems occur at least three nights per week, have lasted at least three months, and cause significant distress or impairment in daytime functioning — even when you have adequate time and opportunity to sleep.
What is the first-line insomnia treatment in the UK?
NICE recommends Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) as the first-line insomnia treatment for both short-term and long-term cases. CBT-I addresses the thoughts and behaviours that maintain poor sleep. Access via the NHS is, however, severely limited — a 2024 FOI request found that only 17 of 132 NHS Trusts offered it in both face-to-face and digital formats, creating a significant postcode lottery across the UK.
Do I need a GP referral to book a sleep consultation?
No. Naturecan Clinic operates a direct self-referral model — you can book a private sleep consultation without a GP referral. You will need to share your medical history and details of any treatments you've already tried, but no referral letter is needed to get started. Simply complete our short eligibility check.
Is my consultation information kept private?
Yes. All consultations are completely confidential. Naturecan Clinic is regulated by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and operates in accordance with UK medical privacy standards and GDPR. Your GP will not be contacted without your consent, unless there is a clinical safety reason to do so.
Ready to Take the Next Step?

If poor sleep has been affecting your
quality of life

If poor sleep has been affecting your quality of life and previous treatments or interventions have not provided adequate relief, you may wish to discuss this with a specialist clinician. Our doctors are here to listen properly, assess thoroughly, and work with you on a plan that fits your situation.
No GP referral needed  ·  Remote video appointments  ·  Specialist doctors  ·  CQC regulated
References & Sources Show all
1
The Sleep Charity. Dreaming of Change: A Manifesto for Sleep. 2024.
thesleepcharity.org.uk ↗
2
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. Sleep: a neglected public health issue. May 2024.
doi.org/10.1016/S2213-8587(24)00132-3 ↗
3
de Lange MA et al. Insomnia symptom prevalence in England: UK Biobank. BMJ Open. 2024;14(5):e080479.
bmjopen.bmj.com ↗
4
Aggarwal A, Erridge S et al. UK Medical Cannabis Registry: clinical outcomes analysis for insomnia. PLOS Mental Health. 2025;2(8):e0000390.
journals.plos.org ↗
5
RAND Corporation. Why Sleep Matters — The Economic Costs of Insufficient Sleep. 2016.
rand.org/pubs/RR1686 ↗
6
UK Biobank. What the world's largest sleep survey could reveal about health and disease. 2025.
ukbiobank.ac.uk ↗
7
NICE. Insomnia in adults: clinical management. Guideline NG240. 2024.
nice.org.uk/guidance/ng240 ↗
8
The Sleep Charity. 14 million+ undiagnosed sleep disorders damaging health and costing billions. 2024.
thesleepcharity.org.uk ↗
9
Hillarys. UK Sleep Statistics 2025.
hillarys.co.uk/sleep-statistics-2025 ↗