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THE EFFECT OF AROMATHERAPY INTERVENTIONS ON SLEEP PROBLEMS AND SLEEP QUALITY IN POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Nermin Altunbaş, Zehra Gölbaşı

International Journal of Traditional and Complementary Medicine Research - 2026;7(1):52-58

Department of Nursing, Sivas Cumhuriyet University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Sivas, Türkiye

 

This systematic review evaluated the effects of aromatherapy interventions on sleep problems and sleep quality in postmenopausal women. A search conducted in September 2025 of Web of Science, PubMed, and Scopus followed PRISMA 2020 GUIDELINES. Eligible stu dies were English -language randomized controlled or clinical trials enrolled postmenopausal women without diagnosed disease and reporting sleep outcomes. Seven studies published between 2018 and 2025 were included: five randomized controlled trials (three double -blind, two single -blind), one quasi -experimental placebo -controlled study, and one single -group pretest -posttest study. Studies were conducted in Iran (n=3), Brazil (n=2), Türkiye (n=1), and South Korea (n=1). Sample sizes ranged from 26 to 132; participants were 45 -65 years old. All interventions used inhalation aromatherapy. Essential oils included Lavandula angustifolia (n=5), Citrus aurantium (n=1), Citrus bergamia (n=1), Abies holophylla (n=1), and Citrus lemon (n=1). Sleep outcomes were assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (n=4), Epworth Sleepiness Scale (n=1), General Sleep Disturbance Scale (n=1), the insomnia subscale of the Kupperman Menopause Index (n=1), and sleep diaries (n=1). According to studies, aromatherapy significantly improved sleep quality and/or reduced sleep problems (p<0.05) compared with baseline and/or control. Aromatherapy appears to be a safe, low -cost, non -pharmacological complementary approach for improving sleep in postmeno pausal women. However, heterogeneity of protocols, short follow -up, and small samples limit generalizability. Larger, longer, rigorously blinded randomized trials with standardized dosing and objective sleep metrics are needed.