Children's Sleep and Externalizing Problems: A Day-to-day Multilevel Modeling Approach.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Behavioral Sleep Medicine Pub Date : 2023-11-02 Epub Date: 2022-12-13 DOI:10.1080/15402002.2022.2156510
Maureen E McQuillan, John E Bates, Caroline P Hoyniak, Angela D Staples, Sarah M Honaker
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Abstract

Background: Sleep problems and externalizing problems tend to be positively associated, but the direction of this association is unclear.

Method: Day-to-day associations between sleep and behavior were examined in children (N = 22) ages 3-8 with clinical levels of externalizing problems. These children were enrolled in Parent Management Training and behavioral sleep intervention. During assessments before and after treatment, children wore actigraphs for seven days and parents concurrently completed sleep diaries and daily tallies of noncompliance, aggression, and tantrums. Multilevel modeling was used to account for the nested structure of the data, at the day-to-day level (level 1), within assessment points (level 2), and within children (level 3).

Results: Late sleep timing and fragmentation were predictive of next-day noncompliance and tantrums, respectively. There were fewer associations for a given day's behavior predicting that night's sleep, although children who showed more aggression and noncompliance at baseline tended to have later bedtimes and sleep onset times compared to other children.

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儿童睡眠与外部化问题:一种日常的多层次建模方法。
背景:睡眠问题和外化问题往往呈正相关,但这种关联的方向尚不清楚。方法:在3-8岁临床存在外化问题的儿童(N=22)中,研究睡眠和行为之间的日常关联。这些孩子参加了家长管理培训和行为睡眠干预。在治疗前后的评估中,孩子们连续七天佩戴活动记录仪,父母同时完成睡眠日记和不顺从、攻击和发脾气的每日记录。在日常水平(1级)、评估点内(2级)和儿童内(3级),使用多层次建模来解释数据的嵌套结构。结果:晚睡时间和碎片分别可以预测第二天的不顺从和发脾气。尽管与其他儿童相比,在基线时表现出更具攻击性和不顺从性的儿童往往睡得更晚,睡眠开始时间也更晚,但特定一天的行为预测当晚睡眠的关联更少。
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来源期刊
Behavioral Sleep Medicine
Behavioral Sleep Medicine CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-PSYCHIATRY
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
3.20%
发文量
49
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Behavioral Sleep Medicine addresses behavioral dimensions of normal and abnormal sleep mechanisms and the prevention, assessment, and treatment of sleep disorders and associated behavioral and emotional problems. Standards for interventions acceptable to this journal are guided by established principles of behavior change. Intending to serve as the intellectual home for the application of behavioral/cognitive science to the study of normal and disordered sleep, the journal paints a broad stroke across the behavioral sleep medicine landscape. Its content includes scholarly investigation of such areas as normal sleep experience, insomnia, the relation of daytime functioning to sleep, parasomnias, circadian rhythm disorders, treatment adherence, pediatrics, and geriatrics. Multidisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome. The journal’ domain encompasses human basic, applied, and clinical outcome research. Behavioral Sleep Medicine also embraces methodological diversity, spanning innovative case studies, quasi-experimentation, randomized trials, epidemiology, and critical reviews.
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