Zhai Shumenghui, Hash Jonika, Ward Teresa M, Yuwen Weichao, Sonney Jennifer
School of Nursing, Pacific Lutheran University, 12180 Park Ave. S, Tacoma, WA 98447, United States of America.
School of Nursing, University of Washington, 1959 NE Pacific St., Seattle, WA 98195, United States of America.
J Pediatr Nurs. 2023 Nov-Dec;73:e65-e74. doi: 10.1016/j.pedn.2023.07.011. Epub 2023 Jul 20.
Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) is a middle-range theory with triadic determinism between behavioral, environmental, and personal. SCT has been a guiding framework in health promotion research as it helps understand people's behaviors.
Behavioral Insomnia of Childhood (BIC) is highly prevalent, affecting up to 45% of typically developing children and 80% of children with special healthcare needs. BIC leads to sleep deficiency, disrupted physical and psychological health, poor school performance, behavioral dysfunction, and negatively affects parental and family functioning. Using Fawcett's framework, we analyzed and evaluated SCT in a pediatric sleep context and propose a reformulation of SCT to better inform sleep research.
SCT is individually focused and does not account for interdependence within relationships. Pediatric sleep interventions have limited long-term effects and sustainability without considering the parent-child dyadic interdependency. We advance the argument that the parent-child shared management (PCSM) perspective is beneficial for understanding pediatric sleep health. PCSM is a concept that reflects the shared responsibility and interdependence that parent and child have for managing child health. It assumes that with parents' ongoing support, children's responsibility for their health management increases over time, along with developmental progression and health-related experiences. We propose reformulating SCT by integrating PCSM in the pediatric sleep context: SCT with Shared Management (SCT-SM). The proposed SCT-SM accounts for parent-child interdependence and role transition. Shared management interventions that engage parents and children in active roles in managing sleep have potential sustainable effects in improving sleep and quality of life. (250).
社会认知理论(SCT)是一种中层理论,具有行为、环境和个人之间的三元决定论。社会认知理论一直是健康促进研究中的指导框架,因为它有助于理解人们的行为。
儿童行为性失眠(BIC)非常普遍,影响高达45%的正常发育儿童和80%有特殊医疗需求的儿童。儿童行为性失眠会导致睡眠不足、身心健康紊乱、学业成绩不佳、行为功能障碍,并对父母和家庭功能产生负面影响。我们使用福西特的框架,在儿科睡眠背景下分析和评估了社会认知理论,并提出对社会认知理论进行重新阐述,以更好地为睡眠研究提供信息。
社会认知理论关注个体,没有考虑关系中的相互依存性。儿科睡眠干预如果不考虑亲子二元相互依存性,长期效果和可持续性有限。我们提出这样的观点,即亲子共同管理(PCSM)视角有利于理解儿科睡眠健康。亲子共同管理是一个反映父母和孩子在管理儿童健康方面共同责任和相互依存性的概念。它假定在父母持续支持下,随着发育进程和与健康相关的经历,孩子对自身健康管理的责任会随着时间增加。我们建议在儿科睡眠背景下通过整合亲子共同管理来重新阐述社会认知理论:即共享管理的社会认知理论(SCT-SM)。所提出的共享管理的社会认知理论考虑到了亲子相互依存性和角色转变。让父母和孩子积极参与管理睡眠的共享管理干预措施在改善睡眠和生活质量方面可能具有潜在的可持续效果。(250)