Faculty of Psychology and Sports Science, Department of Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy of Childhood and Adolescence, Bielefeld University, P.O.P. 10 01 31, DE-33501, Bielefeld, Germany.
BMC Pediatr. 2022 Oct 7;22(1):578. doi: 10.1186/s12887-022-03631-5.
Early sleep problems co-occur with crying, eating problems, and parental distress. This study investigates the impact of a parent-focused intervention to improve child sleep with the following aims: (1) To assess the impact on child sleep (sleep onset latency, frequency and duration of nighttime awakenings, frequency of bed-sharing, and nighttime food intake, total nighttime sleep duration, and sleep efficiency), child crying (frequency of crying episodes, of unexplained and unsoothable crying and of crying out of defiance), child eating difficulties, and parental distress of mothers and fathers. (2) To assess the maintenance of any changes in these areas longitudinally, at 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month follow-ups. (3) To explore at the within-subjects level, how children's sleep, crying, eating, and parental distress changed together across all study measurement points.
In this single-arm pilot study, the parents of 60 children participated in six individual sessions of a parent-focused multimodal age-adjusted cognitive-behavioral intervention to improve child sleep. Parents of 39 children (46% girls, age in months M = 22.41, SD = 12.43) completed pre- and at least one measure after the intervention. Sleep diary, questionnaire for crying, feeding, sleeping, and parental stress index (short-form) were assessed pre, post, three, six, and 12 months after the intervention.
Significantly, sleep (decreased sleep onset latency, frequency, duration of nighttime awakenings, bed-sharing, nighttime food intake; increased total nighttime sleep duration, sleep efficiency), crying (reduced frequency of crying episodes, unexplained and unsoothable crying), and parental distress (reduced) changed, which remained partially stable over follow-up. The frequency of crying episodes decreased with fewer nighttime awakenings; morning crying with increased nighttime feeding; unexplained and unsoothable crying with higher sleep efficiency; crying due to defiance with more nighttime awakenings, sleep efficiency, and bed-sharing. Eating problems decreased with shorter night awakenings and time; maternal distress with fewer nighttime awakenings, paternal with less child's nighttime feeding, unexplained and unsoothable crying, and time.
A parental sleep intervention for sleep-disturbed young children could be promising to reduce children's sleep problems, crying, eating problems and parental distress. Future studies should consider more personal contact during the follow-up to reduce the drop-out rate and a randomized-controlled design.
The study was retrospectively registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (ID: DRKS00028578, registration date: 21.03.2022).
早期睡眠问题与哭泣、进食问题和父母的困扰同时发生。本研究旨在探讨以父母为中心的干预措施对改善儿童睡眠的影响,具体目标如下:(1)评估对儿童睡眠(入睡潜伏期、夜间觉醒频率和持续时间、夜间同床频率、夜间进食量、总夜间睡眠时间和睡眠效率)、儿童哭泣(哭泣发作频率、不明原因和无法安抚的哭泣、出于反抗的哭泣)、儿童进食困难和父母的影响。(2)评估在 3 个月、6 个月和 12 个月的随访中,这些领域的任何变化是否得以维持。(3)从个体水平上探讨,儿童的睡眠、哭泣、进食和父母的困扰如何在所有研究测量点上一起变化。
在这项单臂试点研究中,60 名儿童的父母参加了六次个体化的、以父母为中心的、年龄调整的认知行为干预措施,以改善儿童的睡眠。39 名儿童的父母(46%为女孩,年龄为 22.41 个月,标准差为 12.43 个月)完成了干预前和干预后的至少一次测量。在干预前、后、3、6 和 12 个月后,使用睡眠日记、哭泣问卷、喂养、睡眠和父母压力指数(短表)进行评估。
睡眠(入睡潜伏期、频率、夜间觉醒持续时间、同床频率、夜间进食量减少;总夜间睡眠时间、睡眠效率增加)、哭泣(哭泣发作频率减少,不明原因和无法安抚的哭泣减少)和父母的困扰(减少)显著改善,且在随访期间部分稳定。哭泣发作频率随着夜间觉醒次数的减少而减少;早上哭泣随着夜间喂养次数的增加而减少;不明原因和无法安抚的哭泣随着睡眠效率的增加而减少;由于反抗而哭泣则随着夜间觉醒次数、睡眠效率和同床次数的增加而增加。进食问题随着夜间觉醒和时间的减少而减少;母亲的困扰随着夜间觉醒次数的减少、父亲的夜间喂养次数、不明原因和无法安抚的哭泣次数以及时间的减少而减少。
针对睡眠障碍的幼儿的父母睡眠干预措施可能有助于减少儿童的睡眠问题、哭泣、进食问题和父母的困扰。未来的研究应考虑在随访期间增加更多的个人联系,以降低退出率,并采用随机对照设计。
该研究在德国临床试验注册处(ID:DRKS028578,注册日期:2022 年 3 月 21 日)进行了回顾性注册。