4.5 Article

Night Sleep and Parental Bedtime Practices in Low-Risk Preterm and Full-Term Late Talkers

Journal

CHILDREN-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/children9121813

Keywords

night sleep; parental bedtime practices; late talkers; risk factors; low-risk preterm birth; birth order; maternal education; parenting stress

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Funding

  1. University of Bologna

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This study found that late talkers often experience settling difficulties, frequent night wakings, and co-sleeping with parents. Parents tend to use encouraging autonomy practices over physical comforting methods. Factors such as being born low-risk preterm, high maternal education level, and mother's parenting stress were associated with different aspects of their sleep and bedtime practices.
Night sleep and parental bedtime practices have rarely been investigated in late talkers. This study aimed to explore: night sleep, parental bedtime practices, and their associations in late talkers as well as individual, socio-demographic, and socio-relational factors affecting them. Parents of 47 30-month-old late talkers, born low-risk preterm (n = 24) or full-term (n = 23), with an expressive vocabulary size <= 10th percentile measured by the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory Words and Sentences, and normal cognitive abilities measured by the Bayley Scales, completed the Infant Sleep Questionnaire, the Parental Interactive Bedtime Behaviour Scale, and the Parenting Stress Index Short Form. Results showed slight settling difficulties, night wakings, and frequent co-sleeping in late talkers. Encouraging autonomy practices were frequently used by parents, rather than active physical comforting ones. Recurrent settling difficulties were reported by parents who often applied encouraging autonomy practices, whereas greater night waking problems and frequent co-sleeping were reported by parents who often left their child crying. Low-risk preterm birth and mother's parenting stress predicted total sleep difficulties and night wakings; first-born, high maternal education level and mother's parenting stress predicted settling difficulties; mother's parenting stress was the only predictor for co-sleeping and leaving to cry. These findings have relevant implications for improving late talkers' night sleep and their parents' bedtime practices.

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