The Growing Interest in Acupuncture
Acupuncture has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for thousands of years. But acupuncture is not one thing — it is a family of techniques. There is standard body needling, electroacupuncture (where mild electrical current runs through the needles), auricular acupressure (pressing points on the ear), moxibustion (applying heat to acupuncture points), and tuina (a form of massage). Each stimulates specific points on the body believed to regulate the nervous system.
The question researchers have wanted to answer for years is this: which technique, or which combination of techniques, actually works best for sleep?
What We Knew — And What Changed
Past studies showed that various acupoint therapies helped with sleep. But most studies tested only one approach at a time, making it impossible to compare them directly. Without head-to-head comparisons, it was hard to know which option a patient should try first.
But here's the twist: a new type of statistical analysis called a network meta-analysis lets researchers compare multiple treatments at once — even when they were never tested head-to-head in the same trial. It is like a tournament bracket built from dozens of separate competitions.
How Acupuncture May Affect Sleep
Think of the brain's sleep system like a volume dial. In healthy sleep, the dial turns down neural activity at night. In insomnia, that dial gets stuck. Acupuncture is thought to work partly by nudging the nervous system back toward balance — stimulating pathways that increase calming brain chemicals like GABA and serotonin, while reducing stress-related signals.
Specific acupuncture points have been linked to sleep regulation in research. The point HT7 (called Shenmen, on the wrist) appears most frequently in trials. GV20 (on the top of the head) and the sleep-specific point Anmian (behind the ear) also show up often. When these points are stimulated together — especially with electrical current or heat — the effect may be stronger than with needles alone.
The Study Snapshot
Researchers searched eight major medical databases and six clinical trial registries for every relevant study published up through September 2024. They identified 95 randomized controlled trials involving 7,628 patients. These trials compared 14 different acupoint therapies using 108 distinct acupuncture points. Researchers then used a network meta-analysis to rank the therapies by effectiveness on sleep quality scores and overall response rates.
For overall improvement in sleep quality — measured by a widely-used scale called the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index — moxibustion combined with tuina ranked highest. This pairing of heat therapy and therapeutic massage outperformed acupuncture alone and most other combinations.
For the rate of patients who achieved meaningful improvement (called the total effective rate), body acupuncture combined with electroacupuncture ranked at the top.
Perhaps most striking: a combination of electroacupuncture and auricular acupressure showed the best results across all six sub-components of the sleep quality scale — including sleep duration, efficiency, and daytime function.
The evidence suggests some combinations work better than others — but this field is still building its foundation.
That is not the full story, though. The quality of the evidence varied significantly across trials. Many studies had small sample sizes, short follow-up periods, and inconsistent methods. The researchers used formal tools to assess bias and confidence in the findings, and found that certainty was only moderate to low for most comparisons.
Where This Fits in Insomnia Care
This review is one of the largest and most rigorous attempts yet to rank acupoint therapies for insomnia against each other. It provides a useful map for clinicians and patients who are already considering acupuncture and want to know which approach might offer the most benefit.
It is important to be clear: this research does not position acupuncture as superior to cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I), which remains the most evidence-based treatment for chronic sleep problems. But it does suggest that for patients who cannot access CBT-I, or who are looking for a complement to other care, specific acupoint combinations may offer meaningful help.
If you have chronic insomnia and are interested in acupuncture, talk to your doctor. Acupuncture is generally safe when performed by a trained practitioner, and some of these approaches can be done in outpatient settings. Auricular acupressure seeds — small beads taped to ear points — can even be used at home between sessions.
The major limitation of this analysis is the uneven quality of the underlying trials. Most were conducted in China, which may limit how well the findings apply to other populations. The studies also varied widely in how they measured outcomes and how long they followed patients. None of the studies tracked long-term effects beyond the active treatment period.
Researchers call for larger, higher-quality trials that directly compare acupoint therapies to CBT-I and pharmacological treatments, and that follow patients for months or years after treatment ends. Future work should also explore the biological mechanisms — specifically how stimulating acupuncture points shifts immune and neurological activity in ways that promote sleep. If those mechanisms can be mapped clearly, it may become possible to match specific patients to specific acupoint protocols based on their biology, not just tradition.