Sleep health in young children living with socioeconomic adversity.

RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH(2020)

引用 18|浏览54
暂无评分
摘要
Racially and ethnically diverse young children who live with socioeconomic adversity are at high risk for sleep deficiency, but few behavioral sleep interventions (BSIs) are tailored to their needs. To support the future development of a feasible, acceptable, and culturally relevant sleep intervention, we conducted a community-engaged, mixed-methods study with 40 low-income, racially, and ethnically diverse parents to describe sleep characteristics, sleep habits, and parental sleep knowledge of their 6-36-month-old children and to examine the associations between children's sleep characteristics and sleep habits. This report presents quantitative data from this mixed-methods study. We measured objective (actigraphy) and parent-reported sleep (Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire) characteristics, sleep habits at bedtime, sleep onset, and during night awakenings, parental sleep knowledge, psychological function (Brief Symptom Inventory), and parenting stress (Parenting Stress Index). Children had low sleep duration (537.2 +/- 54.7 nighttime and 111.2 +/- 29.8 nap minutes), late bedtimes (22:36 +/- 1.5 hr), and high bedtime variability (mean squared successive difference = 3.68 +/- 4.31 hr) based on actigraphy. Parental knowledge about sleep recommendations was limited. Sleep habits before bedtime, at sleep onset, and during night awakenings were varied. Sixty-five percent of parents reported co-sleeping. Feeding near bedtime or during the night was associated with later bedtimes, more fragmented sleep, and increased bedtime variability. These findings suggest the need for BSIs to support earlier bedtimes and improve sleep duration and continuity by addressing modifiable behaviors. Tailored BSIs that consider socioecological influences on the development of sleep habits are needed.
更多
查看译文
关键词
actigraphy,community-engaged research,health disparities,infants,sleep,toddlers
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要