Some nights feel endless. You turn to one side, then the other. Your body is tired, but your mind keeps going, replaying work conversations, family worries, exam pressure, or a general sense of unease you can’t quite name.
After a while, poor sleep stops feeling like “just a rough patch”. It starts affecting your patience, your focus, your mood, and your confidence. You may even wonder whether you’re overreacting. You’re not.
Tired of Being Tired? A Gentle Introduction to Understanding Your Sleep
Sleep problems can feel private and lonely. Many people keep going through the day with a smile, while feeling drained underneath. In India, where long commutes, workplace stress, family responsibilities, and academic pressure often overlap, sleep can become the first part of well-being to suffer.
That’s where the insomnia severity index can help. It isn’t a label. It isn’t a judgement. It’s a structured way to understand what your recent sleep has been like and how much it’s affecting your daily life.

Why a simple sleep check can matter
The Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) is a validated 7-item questionnaire designed to quantify insomnia severity. In India, sleep disorders affect 10 to 20% of the urban population, and the tool is used for screening. A 2022 study in Mumbai and Delhi found that 28% of urban adults had subthreshold insomnia, with higher scores linked to a 2.3 times greater risk of anxiety and 22% higher absenteeism in severe cases. The same source also highlights the 40% comorbidity between insomnia and depression in Indian populations, which shows why early understanding matters for overall mental health and well-being (Harvard Sleep Medicine ISI document).
When readers first hear “assessment”, they often imagine something intimidating. The ISI is much gentler than that. It asks about common experiences such as trouble falling asleep, waking in the night, and how sleep problems affect your day.
Practical rule: An assessment like the ISI is informational, not diagnostic. It helps you notice patterns and decide whether self-care, counselling, therapy, or medical support may be worth exploring.
Sleep is connected to more than stress alone
Many people assume sleep trouble comes only from overthinking. Sometimes that’s true. But sleep can also be influenced by routine, physical discomfort, relationship strain, burnout, or health issues you may not connect to sleep straight away.
One helpful example is the connection between oral health and sleep quality, which shows how sleep can overlap with other parts of health. That broader view can be comforting, because it reminds you that your sleep isn’t “failing”. It’s sending information.
If you’ve been feeling exhausted, flat, irritable, or less resilient than usual, understanding your sleep is a kind step towards clarity. It gives shape to an experience that can otherwise feel vague and overwhelming.
What Exactly Is the Insomnia Severity Index
You may have had this experience. You sleep badly for days, maybe weeks, and start asking yourself, “Is this just a rough patch, or is something deeper going on?” The insomnia severity index gives that question some structure. It helps you put words and numbers to an experience that can otherwise feel foggy.
The ISI is a short questionnaire designed to measure how much insomnia is affecting you right now. It does not hunt for a single cause, and it does not reduce your sleep to hours alone. Instead, it looks at the full picture of your recent sleep experience over the past two weeks, including what happens at night and how it spills into the day.
That distinction is important because two people can have similar sleep patterns on paper and feel very different in real life. One person may feel irritated but cope reasonably well. Another may feel drained, anxious, tearful, or unable to focus at work or college. The ISI captures that human side of sleep difficulty.
What the ISI measures
The questionnaire asks about the parts of insomnia people commonly struggle with, along with the effect those struggles have on daily life.
It covers:
- Falling asleep. Are you spending a long time trying to drift off?
- Staying asleep. Do you wake during the night and find it hard to settle again?
- Waking too early. Are you up before you want to be, with sleep cut short?
- Satisfaction with sleep. Does your sleep feel refreshing, or does it leave you disappointed?
- Daily interference. Is poor sleep affecting work, study, household responsibilities, or relationships?
- Noticeability. Do you feel the effects are visible to other people around you?
- Distress. How upsetting, frustrating, or worrying does the problem feel?
A helpful way to understand the ISI is to see it as a compass rather than a verdict. It does not label you. It helps you notice where you are.
What the score means and what it does not
The ISI is a 7-item self-report questionnaire. Each item is rated from 0 to 4, which gives a total score between 0 and 28. “Self-report” means your answers come from your own lived experience. That matters in sleep care, because you are the person living with the restless nights, the tired mornings, and the mental strain that can follow.
The score shows the current burden of insomnia. It does not identify the exact reason behind it. Stress from work, pressure around exams, caregiving fatigue, relationship strain, anxiety, depression, burnout, physical discomfort, and changing routines can all shape sleep. In India, many people also deal with long commutes, irregular work hours, multigenerational household demands, and constant digital stimulation late into the evening. The ISI helps you recognise the impact, even before you fully understand every cause.
The ISI is best used as a guide for self-understanding, reflection, and conversations with a therapist, counsellor, or doctor.
A higher score is not a sign that you have failed at sleep. It is a sign that your sleep difficulties are taking up more space in your life and deserve care.
Why subjective experience matters
People often dismiss their own sleep problems. They say, “I’m still functioning,” or “Other people have it worse,” or “Maybe I’m just overreacting.” But if poor sleep is making you more irritable, less patient, more anxious, or less able to enjoy ordinary moments, that impact is real.
This is one reason the ISI is so useful in counselling and therapy. It gives shape to something that often feels blurry. Once sleep stops being a vague struggle and becomes something you can describe clearly, it becomes easier to work through the why and choose the next helpful step. For some people, that may mean changing routines. For others, it may mean getting support for anxiety, stress, or emotional overload through a platform like DeTalks.
The ISI Questionnaire and How to Score It Yourself
Completing the ISI can feel less like taking a test and more like pausing for honest self-reflection. You’re not trying to be impressive, positive, or tough. You’re answering based on what your sleep has really been like over the last two weeks.
Try to respond to each question with the answer that feels most accurate overall, even if some nights were better than others. Go with your general pattern, not your best night or your worst one.
The seven ISI questions
Use the table below as a simple self-check. For each question, choose one score from 0 to 4.
| Question | None (0) | Mild (1) | Moderate (2) | Severe (3) | Very Severe (4) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difficulty falling asleep | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Difficulty staying asleep | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Problems waking too early | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Satisfaction with current sleep pattern | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| How much sleep problems interfere with daily functioning | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| How noticeable the sleep problem is to others | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| How worried or distressed you feel about the sleep problem | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
The first three questions focus more on the night itself. The last four bring in your emotional experience and daytime functioning. That’s important, because insomnia isn’t only about being awake. It’s also about what that wakefulness costs you.
How to answer honestly
People often get stuck on questions like sleep satisfaction or noticeability. They wonder, “What if I’m not sure?” In that case, choose the option that feels closest.
A few gentle guidelines can help:
- Answer from real life. Think about weekdays, weekends, workdays, and ordinary evenings, not just unusual nights.
- Include daytime impact. If poor sleep affects concentration, patience, motivation, or resilience, let that count.
- Don’t downplay distress. If your sleep problem is making you anxious about bedtime, that matters.
- Don’t panic about a high number. A score is information, not a verdict.
If you’re tempted to say “I’m fine, I just need to cope better”, pause and answer as kindly as you’d want a friend to answer.
How to calculate your total score
Once you’ve chosen one answer for each of the seven items, add the numbers together.
Use this simple process:
- Score each question from 0 to 4.
- Add all seven scores.
- Write down the total.
- Compare it with the score ranges in the next section.
Here’s a very simple example without assigning a “meaning” yet. If someone answers 2, 3, 2, 2, 3, 1, and 2, they would add those numbers for a total score. That total becomes a clearer snapshot of how strongly sleep problems are affecting them right now.
Why self-scoring can be useful
The value of this exercise isn’t just the final number. It’s the clarity you gain while answering. You may notice that your biggest issue isn’t falling asleep at all. It may be early waking, constant fatigue, or the emotional toll of dreading bedtime.
That self-awareness can be powerful in therapy, counselling, or even a personal journal. It turns “I’m always tired” into something more specific and workable.
A structured self-check can also reduce confusion. Many people swing between minimising their sleep difficulty and catastrophising it. The insomnia severity index creates a middle ground. It gives you a more balanced way to name what’s happening.
Understanding Your Insomnia Severity Index Score
You add up your answers and get a number. Then comes the question that matters most. What does that number say about your sleep, your stress, and your next step?
The ISI score works like a map legend. It does not define you, and it does not predict your future. It gives shape to something that can feel vague and overwhelming, especially when you have been lying awake at 2 a.m. wondering whether you are overreacting or not getting enough help.
The score is usually read in four ranges: 0 to 7, 8 to 14, 15 to 21, and 22 to 28. These ranges are commonly described as no clinically significant insomnia, subthreshold insomnia, moderate clinical insomnia, and severe clinical insomnia. The labels matter less than the lived experience behind them. What changes as the score rises is usually the extent to which sleep trouble begins affecting your mood, concentration, patience, and daily functioning.

Score range 0 to 7
This range suggests that insomnia is not showing up in a clinically significant way right now. You may still have the occasional bad night, especially during stressful periods, travel, family responsibilities, shift changes, or exam pressure.
That can still feel frustrating. It means the pattern may be mild, brief, or not strongly disrupting daytime life.
Score range 8 to 14
This range is often called subthreshold insomnia. Sleep problems are present, and you are noticing them, but they may not have fully taken over your routine yet.
For many people, this is the stage where the mind starts getting involved. You may begin worrying about sleep before bedtime, checking the clock, or feeling slightly drained the next day. In the Indian context, this can show up during long commutes, late-night screen use, work pressure, caregiving, or competitive academic schedules. The sleep issue is real, even if you are still managing to "push through."
Score range 15 to 21
This range reflects moderate clinical insomnia. By this point, sleep difficulty is usually affecting more than the night itself. It may be shaping your day.
You might notice irritability, low energy, forgetfulness, or a sense that your body is tired but your mind will not switch off. Anxiety and insomnia often feed each other here. Stress makes sleep lighter and harder to trust. Poor sleep then makes stress feel louder the next day. A score in this range often means you would benefit from structured support rather than trying to fix it through willpower alone.
A higher score is a clearer signal that your sleep needs care and attention.
Score range 22 to 28
This range suggests severe clinical insomnia. People here often feel worn down by the effort of trying to sleep, failing, and then facing another demanding day.
There is often a strong emotional layer too. Fear of bedtime, frustration with your own mind, and hopeless thoughts can start building around sleep. If this is your score, kindness matters. Reaching out for professional help is a sensible response to a difficult pattern.
How to read your score wisely
Your total score is a useful guide, but it is still one snapshot. A person scoring 12 during a short-term stressful week may need something different from a person scoring 12 month after month. The number gives direction. Your context gives meaning.
A helpful way to read the score is to ask three simple questions. How often is this happening? How much is it affecting my day? What seems to be keeping it going? Sometimes the answer is irregular routine. Sometimes it is anxiety, grief, burnout, relationship strain, or the habit of fighting sleep so hard that bedtime itself becomes stressful.
Keep these points in mind:
- Look for patterns over time. One difficult week does not tell the whole story.
- Pay attention to daytime effects. Sleep trouble often shows up as irritability, brain fog, low motivation, or emotional sensitivity.
- Use the score to choose your next step. A lower score may point toward self-help and routine changes. A higher score may suggest counselling, CBT-I, or medical guidance.
Used well, the ISI score gives you language for what you are going through. That kind of clarity can bring relief. It can also help you stop blaming yourself and start choosing support that fits your situation.
Why the ISI Is a Trusted Tool for Well-being
People trust a questionnaire more when they understand why professionals use it. The insomnia severity index has earned that trust because it’s both practical and consistent.
In simple terms, a good tool should do two things. It should measure what it claims to measure, and it should give reasonably stable results when your situation hasn’t changed much. That’s what clinicians mean by validity and reliability.

Why professionals keep using it
In India, the ISI has shown strong psychometric properties, including Cronbach’s alpha of 0.85 and test-retest reliability of 0.89 in a 2023 study. It also showed a significant correlation with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (r=0.78). In that same evidence base, 22.5% of university students had moderate insomnia linked to 30% higher exam stress, and an AIIMS Delhi study reported 65% symptom reduction post-CBT-I, supporting the ISI’s value in both screening and treatment tracking (Journal of Sleep Research validation findings).
If those terms sound technical, here’s the human version. The ISI is trusted because it repeatedly helps people and professionals capture a real problem clearly enough to act on it.
A tool for screening and a tool for progress
The ISI is useful at two different moments.
First, it helps with screening. If someone has been dismissing their sleep struggles as “normal stress”, the questionnaire can reveal that the impact is bigger than they thought.
Second, it helps with monitoring progress. A therapist or counsellor can use repeat scores to track whether support is helping over time. That can be encouraging, especially when progress feels slow in daily life.
Why this matters emotionally
When sleep is disrupted, people often lose trust in themselves. They stop believing they can recover. A structured tool can restore a little confidence because it creates a way to observe change.
That matters for positive psychology too. Well-being isn’t only the absence of distress. It also includes resilience, steadiness, self-compassion, and the return of hope. If a person starts sleeping better, they often reconnect with these parts of themselves more easily.
A trusted assessment can lower confusion. And lower confusion often makes it easier to ask for help.
A brief and humane check-in
The ISI is short enough to complete without feeling burdened. That brevity is part of its strength. Someone who is exhausted, overwhelmed, or low in motivation can still engage with it.
It also respects personal experience. Sleep can be measured in labs, but your own perception still matters. If you’re waking unrefreshed, struggling at work, or feeling more vulnerable to anxiety or depression, your lived reality belongs in the conversation.
From Insight to Action Your Practical Next Steps
A score becomes useful when it changes what you do next. The aim isn’t to chase perfect sleep overnight. The aim is to respond to your sleep with the right level of support.
The ISI can also help track whether treatment is working. A 4 to 7 point reduction after 4 weeks of CBT-I predicts 70% remission in moderate-to-severe cases. In high-stress regions like Mumbai and Delhi, where insomnia prevalence among professionals has been reported at 31%, practitioners often use scores to guide care. Scores of 15 to 21 may point towards weekly therapy, while scores over 22 suggest a more urgent referral, especially in the context of India’s therapist shortage (PMC review on treatment response and triage).

If your score is low or mildly elevated
If your score falls in the lower ranges, your sleep may still improve with thoughtful routine changes and emotional care. That doesn’t mean “just fix it yourself”. It means you may have room to experiment gently before the problem deepens.
Helpful starting points include:
- Keep a steady wake time. Even if bedtime varies, waking at a similar time can support rhythm.
- Reduce late mental stimulation. Work emails, doom-scrolling, and emotionally loaded conversations close to bedtime can keep your mind activated.
- Create a wind-down ritual. Light stretching, quiet reading, prayer, breathwork, or soft music can signal safety to the body.
- Notice workplace stress. If your mind races only at night, the issue may be unprocessed pressure from the day.
- Be kinder to yourself. Sleep often worsens when people start fearing sleep loss itself.
For some readers, practical home factors matter too. Mattress comfort, room temperature, noise, and evening habits can all affect rest. If you want a broader lifestyle-based overview, this guide on what causes insomnia and how to address it can add useful context.
If your score is in the moderate range
A moderate score often means self-help alone may not be enough. If you’ve already tried “sleep hygiene” and still feel stuck, that’s not a personal failure. It usually means your sleep problem has become more layered.
This is often a good stage to consider therapy or counselling. Support can help in two directions at once. One path addresses the sleep habits and thought patterns that keep insomnia going. The other explores what may be feeding the problem underneath, such as anxiety, depression, grief, burnout, family conflict, or exam stress.
A few signs that professional support may help now:
- Your mind feels alert at bedtime even when your body is tired.
- Your mood is changing and you’re becoming more irritable, tearful, flat, or tense.
- Your work or study is suffering because concentration and motivation are dropping.
- You dread the night and start worrying about sleep long before bedtime.
If your score is high
A high score deserves prompt and compassionate attention. If sleep loss is starting to feel relentless, reaching out is a strong and sensible step.
Support may involve a psychologist, therapist, counsellor, or doctor depending on the full picture. Some people need help mainly with behavioural sleep treatment. Others also need assessment for anxiety, depression, medication questions, or physical health contributors.
Seek support sooner if poor sleep is seriously affecting safety, work functioning, emotional stability, or your ability to cope.
Why CBT-I is often recommended
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is widely regarded as a leading treatment for persistent insomnia. It helps people change the thought patterns and habits that keep the sleep struggle in motion.
CBT-I doesn’t only tell you to relax. It gives structure. It can help you rebuild trust in sleep, reduce bedtime dread, and respond to wakefulness with less fear. For many people, that shift alone supports greater resilience.
Small actions still matter
Even when therapy is needed, daily habits still play a role. Think of them as support beams, not the whole house.
Try a short nightly reset:
- Dim stimulation in the last part of the evening.
- Write down tomorrow’s tasks so your mind doesn’t carry them into bed.
- Use one calming practice such as slow breathing or guided relaxation.
- Respond gently to rough nights instead of turning them into proof that things won’t improve.
Sleep recovery usually isn’t linear. Some nights improve before others do. The goal is steadier well-being, not perfection.
Find Your Path to Better Sleep with DeTalks
A lot of people reach the end of a long day in India feeling worn out, crawl into bed, and then find that sleep still does not come easily. After a while, the problem stops feeling like "just sleep" and starts touching mood, focus, patience, and hope. That is where a clear next step can help.
The insomnia severity index can give you language for what you have been experiencing. It works like a compass for self-understanding, helping you notice whether stress, anxiety, burnout, low mood, or constant mental pressure may be shaping your nights. A score does not define you. It helps you see your pattern more clearly so you can choose what support may fit.
If your sleep struggles are tied to workplace stress, family pressure, relationship strain, exam stress, or emotional overload, you do not have to sort through it alone. A confidential assessment can help you connect the "what" of your sleep difficulty with the "why" behind it. From there, a therapist or counsellor can help you build a plan that suits your routine, your needs, and your pace.
Better sleep often supports more than sleep. It can make space for steadier emotions, clearer thinking, and a greater sense of control in daily life.
Use what you have learned here as a starting point. Let your score guide reflection instead of fear. Progress may begin with one check-in.
You can explore DeTalks to take a confidential insomnia severity index assessment and connect with therapists and counsellors who support sleep concerns, anxiety, depression, stress, burnout, and overall well-being. If you are ready for more clarity, therapy, or a kinder understanding of what your sleep may be telling you, DeTalks offers a practical place to begin.










































