4.1 Review

Reasons mothers bedshare: A review of its effects on infant behavior and development

Journal

INFANT BEHAVIOR & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 66, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2021.101684

Keywords

Bedsharing; Mother-infant co-sleeping; Maternal nighttime caretaking; Breastsleeping

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Bedsharing is controversial in nighttime caregiving in the U.S. and the West, but it is considered beneficial from the perspective of evolutionary pediatrics, anthropology, and cultural psychology. Mothers choose to bedshare for reasons such as breastfeeding, comforting, better sleep, monitoring, bonding/attachment, among others.
Bedsharing is controversial for nighttime caregiving in the U.S. today, as in most of the West. However, from the standpoint of evolutionary pediatrics, anthropology, and cultural psychology, bedsharing is not controversial at all, representing the context for human infant evolution and conferring a host of physiological benefits to the infant as well as the mother. In an effort to understand the rise in Western bedsharing in recent decades (and following Ball, 2002; McKenna & Volpe, 2007), Salm Ward (2015) systematically reviewed the literature on mother-infant bedsharing and identified ten reasons why mothers choose to bedshare: (1) breastfeeding, (2) comforting for mother or infant, (3) better/more sleep for infant or parent, (4) monitoring, (5) bonding/ attachment, (6) environmental reasons, (7) crying, (8) cultural or familial traditions, (9) disagree with danger, and (10) maternal instinct. The current paper offers the review behind the review, highlighting the scientific evidence behind the reasons mothers give for their decision to bedshare, focusing on how mothers' decisions about infant sleep location influence infant behavior and development.

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