Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA.
Sleep. 2021 Mar 12;44(3). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsaa193.
To characterize objectively assessed sleep-wake patterns in infants at approximately 1 month and 6 months and examine the differences among infants with different racial/ethnic backgrounds and household socioeconomic status (SES).
Full-term healthy singletons wore an ankle-placed actigraph at approximately 1 month and 6 months and parents completed sleep diaries. Associations of racial/ethnic and socioeconomic indices with sleep outcomes were examined using multivariable analyses. Covariates included sex, birth weight for gestational age z-score, age at assessment, maternal education, household income, bed-sharing, and breastfeeding.
The sample included 306 infants, of whom 51% were female, 42.5% non-Hispanic white, 32.7% Hispanic, 17.3% Asian, and 7.5% black. Between 1 month and 6 months, night sleep duration increased by 65.7 minutes (95% CI: 55.4, 76.0), night awakenings decreased by 2.2 episodes (2.0, 2.4), and daytime sleep duration decreased by 73.3 minutes (66.4, 80.2). Compared to change in night sleep duration over this development period for white infants (82.3 minutes [66.5, 98.0]), night sleep increased less for Hispanic (48.9 minutes [30.8, 66.9]) and black infants (31.6 minutes [-5.9, 69.1]). Night sleep duration also increased less for infants with lower maternal education and household income. Asian infants had more frequent night awakenings. Adjustment for maternal education and household income attenuated all observed day and night sleep duration differences other than in Asians, where persistently reduced nighttime sleep at 6 months was observed.
Racial/ethnic differences in sleep emerge in early infancy. Night and 24-hour sleep durations increase less in Hispanic and black infants compared to white infants, with differences largely explained by SES.
描述大约 1 个月和 6 个月大的婴儿客观评估的睡眠-觉醒模式,并研究不同种族/民族背景和家庭社会经济地位(SES)的婴儿之间的差异。
足月健康的单胎婴儿在大约 1 个月和 6 个月时佩戴踝部活动记录仪,并由家长填写睡眠日记。使用多变量分析检查种族/民族和社会经济指数与睡眠结果的关联。协变量包括性别、胎龄体重 z 评分、评估时的年龄、母亲的教育程度、家庭收入、同床睡和母乳喂养。
该样本包括 306 名婴儿,其中 51%为女性,42.5%为非西班牙裔白人,32.7%为西班牙裔,17.3%为亚洲人,7.5%为黑人。在 1 个月到 6 个月期间,夜间睡眠时间增加了 65.7 分钟(95%CI:55.4,76.0),夜间醒来次数减少了 2.2 次(2.0,2.4),白天睡眠时间减少了 73.3 分钟(66.4,80.2)。与白人婴儿在此发育期间夜间睡眠时间的变化(82.3 分钟[66.5,98.0])相比,西班牙裔和黑人婴儿的夜间睡眠时间增加较少,分别为 48.9 分钟(30.8,66.9)和 31.6 分钟(-5.9,69.1)。母亲教育程度和家庭收入较低的婴儿夜间睡眠时间增加也较少。亚洲婴儿夜间醒来更频繁。调整母亲教育程度和家庭收入后,除亚洲婴儿外,所有日间和夜间睡眠时间的差异均减弱,在亚洲婴儿中,6 个月时夜间睡眠时间持续减少。
种族/民族差异在婴儿早期就出现了睡眠问题。与白人婴儿相比,西班牙裔和黑人婴儿的夜间和 24 小时睡眠时间增加较少,这些差异在很大程度上可以用 SES 来解释。