The development and evaluation of a web-based training program for cognitive behavioral therapy for nightmares (CBT-N): CBTNightmares.org

January 28, 2026

Military Medicine, 191(1-2), e290-e299.

Pruiksma, K. E., Davis, J. L., Dietch, J. R., Taylor, D. J., Lin, T., Campbell, R. L., Tyler, H. C., Price, W., Olson, E., Wardle-Pinkston, S., Young-McCaughan, S., Peterson, A. L., Bolstad, C., LoSavio, S. T., & Wilkerson, A., for the STRONG STAR Consortium

Objective: Chronic nightmares are associated with a range of mental and physical health problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, alcohol use, and suicide risk. Cognitive behavioral therapy for nightmares (CBT-N) is a recommended treatment, but is underutilized because of the lack of providers trained in CBT-N. We developed and evaluated a web-based provider training for CBT-N: CBTNightmares.org.

Materials and Methods: Experts developed the content and a prototype of CBTNightmares.org. Testing occurred in 3 phases. First, licensed behavioral health providers and trainees with and without a background in CBT-N (n = 17) completed alpha testing, including pre- and post-module quizzes, evaluation questionnaires, and individual interviews. The feedback was used to refine CBTNightmares.org. Next, licensed behavioral health providers and trainees (n = 47) without CBT-N training completed beta testing, including pre- and post-module quizzes and evaluation questionnaires. This informed a second round of revisions to the web-based training. Finally, licensed behavioral health providers were randomly assigned to complete either CBTNightmares.org (n = 57) or a live-virtual 1-day workshop (n = 57). Both groups completed knowledge assessments and a mock therapy session in which they implemented core components of CBT-N (i.e., assessment, exposure-related activities, and rescription-related activities) with a standardized patient and were rated for fidelity to each component of the CBT-N consensus manual.

Results: Alpha and beta testing provided valuable feedback used to improve the site. In the comparison study, estimated marginal posttest mean scores were 8% better in CBTNightmares.org (i.e., CBTNightmares.org = 86% vs. CBT-N live-virtual workshop = 78%), indicating that CBTNightmares.org not only met the non-inferiority criterion set at 10 percentage points, but outperformed CBT-N live-virtual workshop. For fidelity ratings, training condition did not have a statistically significant multivariate effect (Wilks’ Λ = 0.78, F(11, 60) = 1.53, P = .144).

Conclusion: Web-based provider training for CBT-N, CBTNightmares.org, was comparable to a live-virtual workshop and effectively equipped providers with knowledge and skills in assessing and treating nightmares. With its user-friendly access to multimedia resources and its affordability, CBTNightmares.org is poised to promote wide dissemination of training in the delivery of CBT-N and thereby improve the treatment of nightmares in military, veteran, and civilian populations.

https://doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usaf385

Cite this manuscript (APA reference)

Pruiksma, K. E., Davis, J. L., Dietch, J. R., Taylor, D. J., Lin, T., Campbell, R. L., Tyler, H. C., Price, W., Olson, E., Wardle-Pinkston, S., Young-McCaughan, S., Peterson, A. L., Bolstad, C., LoSavio, S. T., & Wilkerson, A., for the STRONG STAR Consortium. (2026). The development and evaluation of a web-based training program for cognitive behavioral therapy for nightmares (CBT-N): CBTNightmares.org. Military Medicine, 191(1-2), e290-e299. https://doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usaf385