Emond Jennifer A, O'Malley A James, Neelon Brian, Kravitz Richard M, Ostbye Truls, Benjamin-Neelon Sara E
Department of Biomedical Data Science, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
Department of Pediatrics, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jun 24;11(6):e044525. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044525.
To determine the associations between screen media use and sleep throughout infancy (3-12 months).
Prospective Nurture birth cohort.
North Carolina, USA, 2013-2015.
Women enrolled in their second to third trimester, completed a phone interview after birth, and completed home visits at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months post partum.
Women reported the usual hours their infants slept during the day and night and their infants' usual use of five screen media activities at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months post partum. Adjusted mixed-effects regression analyses modelled the associations between infant screen time and sleep outcomes while disaggregating the between-infant and within-infant effects.
Among 558 mother-infant dyads, 374 (67.0%) infants were black and 304 (54.5%) households earned <$20 000 per year. Half (254, 50.2%) of the infants engaged with screens at 3 months of age, while 326 (72.9%) engaged at 12 months. The median value of the average daily screen time over the study period was 50 (IQR: 10-141) min. Infant screen time was inversely associated with night-time sleep duration only when considering between-infant effects (adjusted beta: -2.9; 95% CI -5.9 to 0.0; p=0.054 for log-transformed screen time). Effects were stronger for television+DVD viewing specifically (adjusted beta: -5.2; 95% CI -9.1 to -1.4; p<0.01 for log-transformed television+DVD time). For example, an infant who averaged 1 hour of television+DVD viewing over the study period slept, on average, 9.20 (95% CI 9.02 to 9.37) hours per night by 12 months compared with 9.60 (95% CI 9.41 to 9.80) hours per night for an infant with no screen time over the study period. There were no significant within-infant effects between screen time and night-time sleep, and screen time was not associated with daytime sleep or night-time awakenings.
Screen time during infancy was inversely associated with night-time sleep duration; however, causal associations remain uncertain.
NCT01788644.
确定婴儿期(3至12个月)屏幕媒体使用与睡眠之间的关联。
前瞻性养育出生队列研究。
美国北卡罗来纳州,2013 - 2015年。
怀孕第二至第三个月登记入组的女性,产后完成电话访谈,并在产后3、6、9和12个月完成家访。
女性报告其婴儿在白天和夜间通常的睡眠时间,以及婴儿在产后3、6、9和12个月通常进行的五项屏幕媒体活动。调整后的混合效应回归分析对婴儿屏幕使用时间与睡眠结果之间的关联进行建模,同时区分婴儿间效应和婴儿内效应。
在558对母婴中,374名(67.0%)婴儿为黑人,304户(54.5%)家庭年收入低于2万美元。一半(254名,50.2%)的婴儿在3个月大时接触屏幕,而在12个月大时这一比例为326名(72.9%)。研究期间平均每日屏幕使用时间的中位数为50(四分位间距:10 - 141)分钟。仅在考虑婴儿间效应时,婴儿屏幕使用时间与夜间睡眠时间呈负相关(调整后的β值:-2.9;95%置信区间-5.9至0.0;对数转换后的屏幕使用时间p = 0.054)。特别是电视 + DVD观看的影响更强(调整后的β值:-5.2;95%置信区间-9.1至-1.4;对数转换后的电视 + DVD使用时间p < 0.01)。例如,在研究期间平均每天观看1小时电视 + DVD的婴儿,到12个月大时平均每晚睡眠9.20(95%置信区间9.02至9.37)小时,而在研究期间无屏幕使用时间的婴儿平均每晚睡眠9.60(95%置信区间9.41至9.80)小时。屏幕使用时间与夜间睡眠之间不存在显著的婴儿内效应,且屏幕使用时间与白天睡眠或夜间觉醒无关。
婴儿期的屏幕使用时间与夜间睡眠时间呈负相关;然而,因果关系仍不确定。
NCT01788644。