What Sleeping Pills Are Out There?
Dr. Brian Harris, MD
Sleep • Addiction • Anesthesiology
What Sleeping Pills Are Out There?
Dr. Brian Harris, MD
Sleep • Addiction • Anesthesiology
What Sleeping Pills Are Out There?
Dr. Brian Harris, MD
Sleep • Addiction • Anesthesiology
This article is now merged into our canonical medication page: What medications should you use for sleep?.
Why we merged these pages
Both pages covered the same medication classes and safety framework. We combined them to reduce redundancy and keep future updates in one place.
Quick map of options
- Z-drugs (e.g., zolpidem/eszopiclone): modest short-term benefit, meaningful safety tradeoffs.
- Selected antidepressants (e.g., low-dose doxepin): role depends on symptom pattern and side-effect tolerance.
- Benzodiazepines: generally caution for long-term insomnia use.
- OTC antihistamines: commonly used, but often poor long-term fit.
Use this as the main reference
For full class-by-class guidance, risk context, and practical decision framework, go to What medications should you use for sleep?.
Bottom line
- Canonical guide: What medications should you use for sleep?
- For chronic insomnia, behavioral treatment remains first-line, with medication used selectively.
Next: Tapering benzodiazepines and sleep meds—how we do it safely when the time comes.
Educational content only; this is not personalized medical advice. If you have urgent symptoms, seek emergency care.
Ready for a Clinical Deep Dive?
Dr. Harris offers personalized consultations for complex sleep and neuro-recovery cases.
Ready for a Clinical Deep Dive?
Dr. Harris offers personalized consultations for complex sleep and neuro-recovery cases.
Ready for a Clinical Deep Dive?
Dr. Harris offers personalized consultations for complex sleep and neuro-recovery cases.