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COVID-19 婴儿:2019 年与 2020 年的自动视频睡眠描记术与家长报告的婴儿睡眠、屏幕时间和家长健康状况。

COVID-19 babies: auto-videosomnography and parent reports of infant sleep, screen time, and parent well-being in 2019 vs 2020.

机构信息

Flinders University, College of Education, Psychology and Social Work, SA, Australia.

Nanit, Research Department, New York, USA.

出版信息

Sleep Med. 2021 Sep;85:259-267. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2021.07.033. Epub 2021 Jul 24.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly impacted families, yet studies on its effects on infants and their parents have thus far been sparse and based mostly on retrospective parent reporting. This study aimed to prospectively evaluate the impact of COVID-19 living conditions on infant and parent sleep, as well as infant screen exposure, parent daytime sleepiness, and parent depression levels, using multi-method assessment.

METHODS

Infant and parent data collected in 2020 were compared with a matched cohort collected in 2019. The total sample included 1518 US infants aged 1-18 months (M = 8.5, SD = 4.6; 54% boys). Auto-videosomnography metrics were obtained from the 14-day period prior to survey completion (number of analyzed nights: M = 12.11 SD = 2.66 in the 2019 cohort; and M = 11.91 SD = 2.41 in the 2020 cohort). Parents completed online questionnaires regarding their infant's sleep and screen exposure, as well as their own sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, and depression levels.

RESULTS

Compared to 2019, infants in 2020 slept ∼40 min more per night on average, as indicated by auto-videosomnography. Infants additionally had earlier sleep timing, and increased parent-reported sleep-onset latency and nocturnal wakefulness. Infant screen time rose by 18.3 min per day for older infants, but remained stable for younger infants. Parents reported lower daytime sleepiness and higher depression symptomology during 2020, whereas no change was apparent in their sleep quality ratings.

CONCLUSIONS

Restricted living conditions during COVID-19 in the USA led to increased infant screen exposure and parental depression, but also to increased infant sleep duration and reduced parent sleepiness. Future research is needed to examine the mechanistic pathways through which COVID-19 impacted on infant and parent well-being.

摘要

目的

COVID-19 大流行对家庭产生了深远的影响,但迄今为止,关于其对婴儿及其父母影响的研究还很少,且主要基于父母的回顾性报告。本研究旨在使用多方法评估,前瞻性评估 COVID-19 居住条件对婴儿和父母睡眠、婴儿屏幕暴露、父母日间嗜睡和父母抑郁水平的影响。

方法

将 2020 年收集的婴儿和父母数据与 2019 年收集的匹配队列进行比较。总样本包括 1518 名美国 1-18 个月大的婴儿(M=8.5,SD=4.6;54%为男孩)。从完成调查前的 14 天内获得自动视频睡眠图指标(2019 队列中分析的夜间数:M=12.11,SD=2.66;2020 队列中 M=11.91,SD=2.41)。父母在线完成了有关婴儿睡眠和屏幕暴露情况以及自身睡眠质量、日间嗜睡和抑郁水平的问卷。

结果

与 2019 年相比,2020 年的婴儿平均每晚多睡约 40 分钟,这一点通过自动视频睡眠图显示出来。此外,婴儿的入睡时间更早,父母报告的入睡潜伏期和夜间醒来次数增加。对于年龄较大的婴儿,婴儿的屏幕时间每天增加 18.3 分钟,但对于年龄较小的婴儿,屏幕时间保持稳定。与 2019 年相比,父母在 2020 年报告的日间嗜睡程度较低,抑郁症状较严重,而其睡眠质量评分没有明显变化。

结论

美国 COVID-19 期间的限制居住条件导致婴儿屏幕暴露和父母抑郁增加,但也导致婴儿睡眠时间增加和父母嗜睡程度降低。未来需要研究 COVID-19 如何通过影响婴儿和父母的幸福感来影响这些机制途径。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/1945/8418313/331166356f3f/gr1_lrg.jpg

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