a Department of Psychology , University of Maryland.
b Psychology Department , University of Houston.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2018 May-Jun;47(3):382-396. doi: 10.1080/15374416.2017.1357125. Epub 2017 Aug 17.
Little research has examined the processes underlying children's persistent sleep problems and links with later psychopathology. The current study examined the stability of parent-child sleep interactions as assessed with the parent-reported Parent-Child Sleep Interactions Scale (PSIS) and examined whether sleep interactions in preschool-age children predict sleep problems and psychiatric symptoms later in childhood. Participants included 108 preschool-age children (50% female) and their parents. Parents completed the PSIS when children were 3-5 years (T1) and again when they were 6-9 years (T2). The PSIS includes three subscales-Sleep Reinforcement (reassurance of child sleep behaviors), Sleep Conflict (parent-child conflict at bedtime), Sleep Dependence (difficulty going to sleep without parent)-and a total score. Higher scores indicate more problematic bedtime interactions. Children's sleep problems and psychiatric symptoms at T1 and T2 were assessed with a clinical interview. PSIS scores were moderately stable from T1 to T2, and the factor structure of the PSIS remained relatively consistent over time. Higher total PSIS scores at T1 predicted increases in children's sleep problems at T2. Higher PSIS Sleep Conflict scores at T1 predicted increases in oppositional defiant disorder symptoms at T2. Children with more sleep problems and higher PSIS Sleep Reinforcement scores at T1 showed increases in attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, depressive, and anxiety symptoms at T2. These findings provide evidence for the predictive validity of the PSIS and highlight the importance of early parent-child sleep interactions in the development of sleep and psychiatric symptoms in childhood. Parent-child sleep interactions may serve as a useful target for interventions.
很少有研究探讨儿童持续睡眠问题的潜在过程及其与后期精神病理学的联系。本研究通过父母报告的父母-儿童睡眠互动量表(PSIS)评估了父母-儿童睡眠互动的稳定性,并检验了学龄前儿童的睡眠互动是否预测后期儿童的睡眠问题和精神症状。参与者包括 108 名学龄前儿童(50%为女性)及其父母。当孩子 3-5 岁(T1)和 6-9 岁(T2)时,父母完成 PSIS。PSIS 包括三个分量表——睡眠强化(对儿童睡眠行为的安慰)、睡眠冲突(睡前父母-儿童冲突)和睡眠依赖(没有父母难以入睡)以及总分。得分越高表明睡前互动问题越严重。T1 和 T2 时使用临床访谈评估儿童的睡眠问题和精神症状。PSIS 分数从 T1 到 T2 呈中度稳定,PSIS 的因子结构随时间保持相对一致。T1 时的 PSIS 总分越高,预示着 T2 时儿童的睡眠问题会增加。T1 时 PSIS 睡眠冲突得分越高,预示着 T2 时对立违抗性障碍症状会增加。T1 时睡眠问题较多且 PSIS 睡眠强化得分较高的儿童,T2 时注意力缺陷/多动障碍、抑郁和焦虑症状也会增加。这些发现为 PSIS 的预测效度提供了证据,并强调了早期父母-儿童睡眠互动在儿童睡眠和精神症状发展中的重要性。父母-儿童睡眠互动可能是干预的一个有用目标。