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《深夜里的狗事:宠物与人同睡和同床对儿童和青少年睡眠维度的影响》。

The curious incident of the dog in the nighttime: The effects of pet-human co-sleeping and bedsharing on sleep dimensions of children and adolescents.

机构信息

Pediatric Public Health Psychology Laboratory, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

Pediatric Public Health Psychology Laboratory, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada.

出版信息

Sleep Health. 2021 Jun;7(3):324-331. doi: 10.1016/j.sleh.2021.02.007. Epub 2021 Apr 30.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Pets are often thought to be detrimental to sleep. Up to 75% of households with children have a pet, and 30-50% of adults and children regularly share their bed with their pets. Despite these high rates, few studies have examined the effect of pet-human co-sleeping on pediatric sleep. This study compared subjective and objective sleep in youth who never, sometimes, or frequently co-slept with pets.

METHODS

Children (N = 188; aged 11-17 years; M = 13.25 years) and their parents answered standardized sleep questionnaires assessing timing, duration, onset latency, awakenings, and sleep quality. Children completed a home polysomnography (PSG) sleep study for one night and wore an actigraph for two weeks accompanied with daily sleep diary. Based on reported frequency of bedsharing with pets, children were stratified into three co-sleeping groups: never (65.4%), sometimes (16.5%), frequently (18.1%).

RESULTS

Overall, 34.6% of children reported co-sleeping with their pet sometimes or frequently. Results revealed largely identical sleep profiles across co-sleeping groups; findings were congruent across sleep measurement (subjective: child, parent report; objective: PSG, actigraphy). Effect sizes indicated that frequent co-sleepers had the highest overall subjective sleep quality, but longest PSG onset-latency compared to the sometimes group.

CONCLUSIONS

Co-sleeping with pets was prevalent in one third of children. Sleep dimensions were similar regardless of how frequently children reported sharing their bed with their pet. Future research should examine dyadic measurement of co-sleepers to derive causal evidence to better inform sleep recommendations.

摘要

背景

宠物常被认为会影响睡眠。高达 75%有孩子的家庭养宠物,30-50%的成年人和儿童经常与宠物同床共枕。尽管这些比例很高,但很少有研究调查宠物与人类同睡对儿童睡眠的影响。本研究比较了从不、有时或经常与宠物同睡的青少年的主观和客观睡眠。

方法

188 名儿童(年龄 11-17 岁;平均年龄 13.25 岁)及其父母回答了评估睡眠时间、持续时间、潜伏期、觉醒和睡眠质量的标准化睡眠问卷。儿童进行了一晚的家庭多导睡眠图(PSG)睡眠研究,并佩戴了两周的活动记录仪,并伴有每日睡眠日记。根据报告的与宠物同床频率,儿童被分为三组:从不(65.4%)、有时(16.5%)、经常(18.1%)。

结果

总体而言,34.6%的儿童报告有时或经常与宠物同睡。结果显示,同睡组的睡眠模式基本相同;各种睡眠测量结果一致(主观:儿童、父母报告;客观:PSG、活动记录仪)。效应大小表明,与有时组相比,经常同睡者的整体主观睡眠质量最高,但 PSG 潜伏期最长。

结论

三分之一的儿童与宠物同睡。无论儿童报告与宠物同睡的频率如何,睡眠维度都相似。未来的研究应该检查同睡者的二元测量,以获得因果证据,从而更好地为睡眠建议提供信息。

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