Other Drugs

Your Sleeping Pill Use Appears Within Safe Bounds

Fiona Kennedy
Written byFiona Kennedy
Dr Olalekan Otulana
Medically Reviewed by Dr Olalekan Otulana MBChB, MRCGP, FRSPH, MBA Addiction Specialist Physician
Last updated:
28 March 2026

Based on your answers, your use of sleeping medication doesn’t currently show strong signs of dependency. That’s good news – but sleeping pills are designed for short-term use, so it’s worth understanding the risks before they develop.

What your answers suggest

You’re using sleeping pills as prescribed, for a relatively short period, and you can still sleep without them (even if it takes a bit longer). No significant dose escalation, daytime effects, or dependency behaviours were flagged.

What to know about sleeping pills

Most prescription sleeping pills (zopiclone, zolpidem, temazepam) are recommended for 2-4 weeks maximum. Beyond this:

  • Tolerance develops quickly. The same dose becomes less effective, creating pressure to increase.
  • Rebound insomnia. When you stop, your sleep temporarily becomes worse than it was before you started – creating a false impression that you “need” the pills.
  • Cognitive effects. Even at standard doses, regular use impairs memory, concentration, and next-day alertness. Studies show increased accident risk.
  • Dependency. Physical and psychological dependence can develop within weeks.

Protective steps

  • Use sleeping pills only as prescribed and only for the recommended duration.
  • Build non-pharmaceutical sleep habits: consistent bedtime, no screens in the hour before sleep, cool dark room, no caffeine after midday.
  • If you’ve been taking them for more than 4 weeks, discuss a reduction plan at your next review.
  • If you notice you’re relying on them or can’t face a night without them, retake this assessment.

This is informational guidance, not a medical diagnosis.

Everything you’ve shared is completely confidential. Our advice line is free and staffed by trained professionals.

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