For Clinicians

A referral partner for the sleep cases that stall out elsewhere

Secondary audience messaging should be direct: EusomniaMD is built for difficult insomnia, complex breathing disorders, hypersomnia, parasomnias, pediatric sleep, and the overlap between sleep medicine and addiction medicine. The aim is to clarify the diagnosis, treat the problem, and collaborate in a way that helps the referring clinician rather than competing with them.

Ideal Referrals

Common reasons clinicians refer

  • Intractable insomnia, especially after partial medication responses, failed prior treatment, or unclear overlap with apnea, pain, trauma, or psychiatric disease.
  • Complex sleep apnea, central or mixed patterns, UARS, PAP intolerance, and cases where the sleep study report and patient story have never lined up well.
  • Sedative-hypnotic dependence, benzodiazepine or Z-drug tapering, and patients whose relapse risk is tightly linked to unstable sleep.
  • Parasomnias and unclear nocturnal events, including dream enactment, violent sleep behavior, and cases where sleep, neurology, and psychiatry overlap.
  • Hypersomnia, narcolepsy questions, severe sleep inertia, and patients with daytime sleepiness that has not been properly sorted out.
Differentiation

Why this referral lane exists

Board certification in sleep medicine, anesthesiology, and addiction medicine matters when insomnia, respiratory physiology, sedative tolerance, withdrawal, and psychiatric overlap all show up in the same patient. That intersection is the point of the practice, not an accidental side interest.

Two collaboration models

For some patients, the cleanest approach is to evaluate, stabilize, and return the patient with a structured plan. For others, the better fit is to support the referring clinician’s testing pathway and provide escalation when the case becomes more complex.

CBT-I is built into the message

CBT-I is presented as first-line treatment for chronic insomnia. It can be delivered directly when integrated medical-behavioral care is needed, or coordinated with PhD-level CBT-I therapists when referral is the better lane.

Knowledge base as referral support

The site includes a structured library of 50+ physician-authored articles that patients and clinicians can use before referral, during shared care, or after diagnostic clarification.

Knowledge Base

A practical clinical library, not content filler

The article structure is designed to do three things at once: reassure patients, educate seriously interested readers, and give clinicians enough technical depth to know the thinking is real. Public pillars cover insomnia and CBT-I, sleepiness and hypersomnia, sleep apnea and PAP, circadian disorders, parasomnias, RLS and movement disorders, and medication- or substance-related sleep problems.

Referral Contact

How to reach the practice

The public contact page is written to work for both patients and clinicians. It offers a discovery call path, callback or email path, and full evaluation request path.