父母对婴儿睡眠的误解是共同睡眠和婴儿睡眠之间的调节因素

Yuri Roh, E. Jang, N. Barnett, S. Suh
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摘要

目的:同睡被定义为看护人和婴儿睡在同一个地方或房间。本研究的目的是调查共睡、婴儿睡眠和父母对婴儿睡眠的误解之间的关系。方法:研究对象为832名讲英语的护理人员。大多数样本由母亲组成(70.79%)。这些婴儿的年龄从6到12个月不等。所有的参与者都通过在线调查完成了《婴儿睡眠简易问卷-修订》和《父母对婴儿睡眠的理解与误解问卷》。使用自动视频睡眠记录仪记录婴儿睡眠和夜间父母干预。采用卡方分析、非参数协方差分析和适度分析对结果进行分析。结果:调查对象中有771名(92.70%)报告其婴儿为单独睡眠组,61名(7.30%)报告其婴儿为共睡组。共睡组父母对婴儿睡眠的误解(29.67±11.28)高于单独睡组(23.5±10.79);p < 0.001)。共睡组总睡眠时间(523.51±76.38)低于单独睡眠组(604.91±61.29);P <0.001)。父母对婴儿睡眠的误解对父母报告的婴儿夜间醒来次数(NWAK)与共睡之间的关系有显著的调节作用(B=0.033, p =0.017)。结论:与单独睡眠相比,本研究中共睡的患病率较低。同睡与父母对婴儿睡眠的误解程度较高有关。此外,在同睡的看护人的情况下,对婴儿睡眠的更高误解与父母报告的婴儿NWAK密切相关。父母对婴儿睡眠的误解可能是儿童睡眠中需要考虑的重要因素。
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Parental Misperceptions About Infant Sleep as a Moderator Between Co-Sleeping and Infant Sleep
Objectives: Co-sleeping is defined as caregivers and infants sleeping in the same place or room. The purpose of this study was to investigate associations between co-sleeping, infant sleep, and parental misperceptions about infant sleep. Methods: The participants were 832 English-speaking caregivers. Most of the sample comprised of mothers (70.79%). The infants ages ranged from 6 to 12 months. All participants completed the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire-Revised and Parental Understanding and Misperceptions about BAby’s Sleep-Questionnaire in an online survey. Infant sleep and nighttime parental intervention were recorded using auto-videosomnography. The chi-square, non-parametric covariance analysis, and moderation analysis were conducted to analyze the results. Results: Among the respondents, 771 (92.70%) report-ed that their infants were in the solitary-sleeping group and 61 (7.30%), in the co-sleeping group. Parental misperceptions about infant sleep were higher in the co-sleeping group (29.67±11.28) than the solitary-sleeping group (23.5±10.79; p <0.001). The co-sleeping group had lower total sleep time (523.51±76.38) compared to the solitary-sleeping group (604.91±61.29; p <0.001) based on auto-videosomnography. The moderating effect of parental misperceptions about infant sleep in the relationship between parent-reported infant number of awakenings during the night (NWAK) and co-sleeping was significant (B=0.033, p =0.017). Conclusions: Co-sleeping had low prevalence in this study compared to solitary-sleeping. Co-sleeping was associated with higher levels of parental misperception about infant sleep. Additionally, in the case of co-sleeping caregivers, a higher misperception about infant sleep was more strongly associated with parent-reported infant NWAK. Parental misperceptions about infant sleep may be an important factor to consider in pediatric sleep.
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