Iwamoto Brooke K, Neece Cameron L, Nair Aarti, Rockwood Nicholas J, Fenning Rachel M, Krantz Megan L, Van Dyk Tori R
Department of Psychology, Loma Linda University; 11130 Anderson Street, Loma Linda, CA 92354, United States.
Division of Interdisciplinary Studies, Loma Linda University; 11065 Campus Street, Loma Linda, CA 92350, United States.
Res Autism Spectr Disord. 2023 Aug;106. doi: 10.1016/j.rasd.2023.102197. Epub 2023 Jun 17.
Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) are at-risk for sleep and behavior problems, and their parents are at-risk for high stress. Child sleep duration, behavior problems, and parenting stress are interrelated; however, directionality of these associations is unclear and research including youth with ASD is lacking. Using a day-to-day, within-person design, this study explores the directionality of these relationships in families of children with ASD.
Twenty-six children (ages 3-5, 73.1% male, 65.4% Hispanic/Latino) with ASD and their mothers participated in a 14-day study. Child sleep duration (parent-report and actigraphy), behavior problems, and parenting stress were measured daily. Constructs were decomposed into their within- and between-person components and analyzed with random intercept cross-lagged panel models.
While between-person relationships were directionally expected in that shorter sleep, more behavior problems, and greater parenting stress were associated, within-person relationships were complicated. Better-than-average child behavior was associated with less next-day parenting stress, yet more parenting stress than average was associated with better next-day child behavior. As expected, longer-than-average child sleep was associated with less next-day parenting stress, while greater child behavior problems were associated with less sleep that night.
Understanding the directionality of associations between child and parent factors allows for the optimization of interventions to improve the quality of life for families of children with ASD. Interventions that target child behavior and/or help parents manage stress while maintaining effective parenting strategies for sleep and behavior may be useful.
患有自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)的青少年存在睡眠和行为问题的风险,他们的父母也面临着高压力的风险。儿童睡眠时间、行为问题和育儿压力相互关联;然而,这些关联的方向性尚不清楚,且缺乏针对患有ASD的青少年的研究。本研究采用日常的个体内设计,探讨了ASD儿童家庭中这些关系的方向性。
26名患有ASD的儿童(年龄3 - 5岁,73.1%为男性,65.4%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔)及其母亲参与了一项为期14天的研究。每天测量儿童睡眠时间(家长报告和活动记录仪记录)、行为问题和育儿压力。将这些构念分解为个体内和个体间的成分,并使用随机截距交叉滞后面板模型进行分析。
虽然个体间的关系在预期方向上,即较短的睡眠时间、更多的行为问题和更大的育儿压力相关联,但个体内的关系却很复杂。儿童行为优于平均水平与次日较低的育儿压力相关,但高于平均水平的育儿压力却与次日更好的儿童行为相关。正如预期的那样,儿童睡眠时间长于平均水平与次日较低的育儿压力相关,而儿童行为问题较多则与当晚睡眠较少相关。
了解儿童与父母因素之间关联的方向性有助于优化干预措施,以提高ASD儿童家庭的生活质量。针对儿童行为和/或帮助父母管理压力,同时保持有效的睡眠和行为育儿策略的干预措施可能会有所帮助。