Purpose Problems in infant and young child sleep can represent a serious challenge to parental behavior of mother and father. However, most research about the effect of infant and young child sleep on parenting has focused on mothers. Therefore, the present study aimed to explore the perception and consequences of infant and young child sleep problems of both parents. Participants and Methods Participants were recruited via random sampling at, eg, kindergartens in North Rhine Westphalia. The sample includes data of heterosexual German-speaking couples with children without any medical or psychopathological problems. For this study, parents were asked to complete the test battery with regard to their youngest child. As sampling was via the kindergarten, the range of child age was 4–68 months. A survey assessed data of parents (N=196, 46% female). The test battery contained the following questionnaires: Children Sleep Habits Questionnaire (CSHQ), Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), Self-Report Measure for the Assessment of Emotion Regulation Skills (SEK-27), and a German version of the Infant Sleep Vignettes Interpretation Scale (ISVIS). For the outcome variables of parental sleep as well as for parental emotional competence, the statistical tests of ANOVA were used, and for parental sleep-related cognitions with the grouping variables of infant and young child sleep as well as parental gender, a MANOVA was used. According to the analysis of group differences, the age of the child was also included additional to the grouping variable of parental gender and children’s sleep. Results Mothers and fathers in this sample were equally aware of their children’s sleep problems and reported similar sleep quality and emotion regulation themselves (all p > 0.05). Mothers as well as fathers of children with sleep problems had lower parental sleep quality ( F (1, 183) = 110.01, p < 0.001) and emotion regulation ( F (1, 184) = 143.16, p < 0.001) compared to parents of children without sleep problems. In children under 26 months of age, the child’s age seemed to have less negative impact on the father’s sleep quality ( F (1, 183) = 5.01, p < 0.001) and emotion regulation ( F (1, 184) = 0.72, p < 0.05) than on the outcomes of the mother. With regard to sleep-related cognition, there were statistically significant effects of parental gender ( F (2, 185) = 44.39, p < 0.001) and interaction effects of parental gender × child sleep problems observed ( F (2, 185) = 31.91, p < 0.001). Conclusion The conclusion from this survey refers to the role of the father. According to the results, ...
Background Early sleep problems co-occur with crying, eating problems, and parental distress. This study investigates the impact of a parent-focused intervention to improve child sleep with the following aims: (1) To assess the impact on child sleep (sleep onset latency, frequency and duration of nighttime awakenings, frequency of bed-sharing, and nighttime food intake, total nighttime sleep duration, and sleep efficiency), child crying (frequency of crying episodes, of unexplained and unsoothable crying and of crying out of defiance), child eating difficulties, and parental distress of mothers and fathers. (2) To assess the maintenance of any changes in these areas longitudinally, at 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month follow-ups. (3) To explore at the within-subjects level, how children’s sleep, crying, eating, and parental distress changed together across all study measurement points. Methods In this single-arm pilot study, the parents of 60 children participated in six individual sessions of a parent-focused multimodal age-adjusted cognitive-behavioral intervention to improve child sleep. Parents of 39 children (46% girls, age in months M = 22.41, SD = 12.43) completed pre- and at least one measure after the intervention. Sleep diary, questionnaire for crying, feeding, sleeping, and parental stress index (short-form) were assessed pre, post, three, six, and 12 months after the intervention. Results Significantly, sleep (decreased sleep onset latency, frequency, duration of nighttime awakenings, bed-sharing, nighttime food intake; increased total nighttime sleep duration, sleep efficiency), crying (reduced frequency of crying episodes, unexplained and unsoothable crying), and parental distress (reduced) changed, which remained partially stable over follow-up. The frequency of crying episodes decreased with fewer nighttime awakenings; morning crying with increased nighttime feeding; unexplained and unsoothable crying with higher sleep efficiency; crying due to defiance with more nighttime awakenings, sleep efficiency, and bed-sharing. Eating problems decreased with shorter night awakenings and time; maternal distress with fewer nighttime awakenings, paternal with less child’s nighttime feeding, unexplained and unsoothable crying, and time. Conclusions A parental sleep intervention for sleep-disturbed young children could be promising to reduce children’s sleep problems, crying, eating problems and parental distress. Future studies should consider more personal contact during the follow-up to reduce the drop-out rate and a randomized-controlled design. Trial registration The study was retrospectively registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (ID: DRKS00028578, registration date: 21.03.2022).
Sleep and mental disorders in childhood and adolescence Abstract. Sleep problems and disorders are common in childhood and adolescence. This review aims to throw light on the relationship between sleep problems and mental disorders in childhood and adolescence. Sleep problems and disorders appear to be risk factors for mental disorders as comorbidities, as symptoms, and as effects of mental disorders. Frequently, there is an interaction between sleep behaviour and psychopathology so that sleep problems contribute to the intensity and maintenance of mental disorders. This bidirectional association is observed in early childhood as well as in school-aged children and in adolescents. Many studies show that this association has a long-term nature beyond child development. Both environmental and genetic factors seem to play a role in the development and maintenance of the relationship between sleep problems and mental disorders. Various research articles show that treatment of mental disorders and treatment of sleep disorders influence each other in a positive way. Therefore, it is strongly advised to consider sleep problems in diagnosis and treatment but also in prevention of mental disorders.
Zusammenfassung. Theoretischer Hintergrund: Frühkindliche Regulationsprobleme stehen in Verbindung mit Schlafproblemen und unsicherem Elternverhalten. Störungsspezifische Behandlungsansätze sind vielfältig und unterscheiden sich deutlich hinsichtlich Qualität und Evidenzgrad. Fragestellung: Häufigkeiten von Schlafproblemen, elterliche Unsicherheiten, therapeutisch / beraterische Grundorientierungen und Konzepte werden erfasst und Unterschiede zwischen Einrichtungsarten untersucht. Methode: Die Umfrage wurde mit interdisziplinären Experten entwickelt. Eine deutschlandweite Datenbank (622 Einrichtungen) mit einer finalen Stichprobe von N = 160 wurde erstellt. Ergebnisse: Schlafprobleme gelten als häufigster Anmeldegrund (59 %), unsicheres Erziehungsverhalten als mehrheitlich relevant (66 %). Über 16 Behandlungskonzepte werden angewandt; je nach Einrichtungsart eher systemische ( d = 0.5), körperorientierte ( d = 0.5) oder somatisch-medizinische ( d = 0.7) Verfahren. Schlussfolgerung: Die schlafspezifische Expertise der Fachkräfte sollte gesichert sowie Transparenz und Überprüfbarkeit von Qualitätsstandards weiterentwickelt werden.
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