幼儿共用床:频率、伴侣特征及与睡眠的关系。

The Journal of Genetic Psychology Pub Date : 2021-07-01 Epub Date: 2021-05-14 DOI:10.1080/00221325.2021.1916732
Gina M Mason, Jennifer F Holmes, Chloe Andre, Rebecca M C Spencer
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在儿童早期(3-5岁)与他人同床(睡觉时与他人同床)在西方和非西方社会都很常见。虽然先前的研究表明,同床可能与儿童睡眠数量或质量的损害有关,但大多数对幼儿进行的研究仅限于亲子同床,并且几乎完全依赖于照顾者的报告来衡量儿童睡眠。在这里,作者试图进一步了解美国儿童同床行为的多样性,包括不同的同床伴侣(照顾者,兄弟姐妹)如何影响儿童睡眠的活动测量。我们对631名年龄在2:9至5:11岁的儿童进行了抽样调查,发现超过36%的儿童以某种形式与他人同床过夜,其中约22%的儿童习惯性地与他人同床。在收集了活动记录仪测量数据的儿童子集中(n = 337),与单独睡眠者(n = 257)相比,习惯同床的儿童(n = 80)的夜间睡眠时间明显更短,睡眠和起床时间也更晚,午睡时间更长。尽管用更长的午睡时间来补充他们较短的夜间睡眠时间,但习惯性同床儿童的24小时睡眠时间明显短于单独睡眠者,尽管在所有睡眠期间,睡眠效率的差异并不显著。此外,睡眠效率、发病潜伏期和持续时间在习惯与兄弟姐妹同床的儿童和习惯与父母同床的儿童之间没有差异。目前的结果增加了先前的工作,研究儿童早期睡眠差异的家庭背景相关因素,并提供了一个更客观的床铺和儿童睡眠之间关系的解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Bedsharing in Early Childhood: Frequency, Partner Characteristics, and Relations to Sleep.

Bedsharing in Early Childhood: Frequency, Partner Characteristics, and Relations to Sleep.

Bedsharing (sharing a bed with others during sleep) in early childhood (3-5 years old) is common across Western and non-Western societies alike. Though prior work indicates that bedsharing may relate to impairments in child sleep quantity or quality, the majority of studies conducted in young children are limited to parent-child bedsharing and rely almost exclusively on caregiver reports to measure child sleep. Here, the authors endeavored to gain further insights into the diversity of bedsharing practices among children in the United States, including how different bedsharing partners (caregivers, siblings) might impact actigraphy-derived measures of children's sleep. Using a sample of 631 children ages 2:9 to 5:11 years, we found that over 36% of children bedshared in some form overnight, with approximately 22% bedsharing habitually. In a subset of children for whom actigraphy measures were collected (n = 337), children who bedshared habitually (n = 80) had significantly shorter overnight sleep, later sleep and wake times, and longer naps than solitary sleepers (n = 257), even when controlling for socioeconomic status. Despite supplementing their shorter overnight sleep with longer naps, habitually bedsharing children had significantly shorter 24-hr sleep time than did solitary sleepers, though differences in sleep efficiency were nonsignificant for all sleep periods. Additionally, sleep efficiency, onset latency, and duration did not differ between children who habitually bedshared with siblings versus those who habitually bedshared with parents. The present results add to prior work examining family contextual correlates of sleep differences in early childhood and provide a more objective account of relations between bedsharing and child sleep.

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