Washington [US]: Researchers have diagnosed maternal and infant sleep patterns, which helped them identify predictors and provided recommendations for instilling healthy habits, according to a study published in the "Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics". Tianying Cai, a postdoctoral researcher at Northwestern University said that “The first two years is a really critical period where a lot of development is going on, and sleep is important for health. We wanted to look at the association of mother and infant sleep and whether it changes over time”.
“We identified two distinct groups, a low maternal sleep group where the mothers get 5 to 6 hours of sleep per night, and an average maternal sleep group, which meets the national recommended sleep guidelines with 7 to 8 hours per night. Children in the low maternal sleep group also slept less, although the difference wasn’t as large as for the mothers,” Cai added.
The research team kept tracking the parents of 464 infants in the first two years of the infants' life. Mothers filled up surveys regarding their child’s bedtime routines, sleep duration, nighttime waking, and sleep problems at 3, 12, 18, and 24 months of age. The families were part of STRONG Kids 2, a program at the U. of I. that promotes nutrition and healthy habits in families with young children. STRONG Kids 2 co-directors Barbara Fiese, professor emerita of HDFS, and Sharon Donovan, professor of food science and human nutrition, also contributed to the study.
Mothers fitting the low maternal sleep profile got an average of 5.74 hours of sleep per night at 3 months and 5.9 hours at 12 to 24 months, while their children got 9.6 and 10.52 hours, respectively. In the overall sleep profile, mothers got 7.31 hours at 3 months and 7.28 hours at 12 to 24 months, while child sleep averaged 9.99 hours at 3 months and 11 hours at 12 to 24 months.
The research team also distinguished factors that influence the amount of sleep a mother gets. Not surprisingly, one of the strongest predictors is infant-signalled nighttime waking, which means the infant is more likely to alert the parent at night. This could be either because these infants woke more frequently, or because the mothers were more likely to wake up when infants stirred, noted Cai.