TY - JOUR
T1 - Time for bed! Earlier sleep onset is associated with longer nighttime sleep duration during infancy
AU - Adams, Elizabeth L.
AU - Savage, Jennifer S.
AU - Master, Lindsay
AU - Buxton, Orfeu M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Childhood Obesity Prevention Training doctoral program from the National Institute for Food and Agriculture, USDA (Grant #2011–67001-30117). Programming and data visualization costs were supported by startup funds to Dr. Buxton from the Pennsylvania State University College of Health and Human Development and Social Sciences Research Institute. Additional support was provided from the National Institutes of Health for Dr. Adams’ postdoctoral effort (Grant #2T32CA093423).Outside of the current work, Orfeu M. Buxton discloses that he received subcontract grants to Penn State from Proactive Life (formally Mobile Sleep Technologies) doing business as SleepScape (NSF/STTR #1622766, NIH/NIA SBIR R43-AG056250, R44-AG056250), and received honoraria/travel support for lectures from Boston University, Boston College, Tufts School of Dental Medicine, New York University and Allstate, and receives an honorarium for his role as the Editor in Chief of Sleep Health sleephealthjournal.org. Outside of the current work, Dr. Jennifer S. Savage discloses that she received travel support for lectures from Let's Go Main and the American Academy of Pediatrics and honorarium/travel support for serving on an advisory board for Danone Happy Baby Organics. Other authors report no conflicts of interest.
Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Childhood Obesity Prevention Training doctoral program from the National Institute for Food and Agriculture , USDA (Grant # 2011–67001-30117 ). Programming and data visualization costs were supported by startup funds to Dr. Buxton from the Pennsylvania State University College of Health and Human Development and Social Sciences Research Institute. Additional support was provided from the National Institutes of Health for Dr. Adams’ postdoctoral effort (Grant # 2T32CA093423 ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020
PY - 2020/9
Y1 - 2020/9
N2 - Objective/background: Clinical recommendations include putting infants to bed using a consistent bedtime routine at an appropriate hour to promote longer nighttime sleep. Actigraphy was used in this exploratory study to examine how bedtime routines and nighttime sleep onset were associated with nighttime total sleep time (TST) and efficiency from 6 to 24 weeks of age. Patients/methods: Infants (n = 24) wore sleep actigraphs for three, one-week periods at 6, 15, and 24 weeks of age. Nighttime TST, sleep efficiency, sleep onset and offset were quantified. Mothers reported on infant bedtime routines using the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire at each age. Multilevel models examined between- and within-person associations. Results: As infants aged, sleep onset was earlier, and bedtime routines became shorter (p's < 0.05). Infants fell asleep between 7 and 8:00PM on 24% of the nights. Most mothers (70%) reported that they often fed infants to sleep for the night. For every 1 h earlier in infants' usual sleep onset, nighttime TST was 34.4 min longer that night (p < 0.01). Infants with earlier than usual sleep onset had slightly earlier sleep offset the next morning (8.4 min for every 1 h earlier in onset; p = 0.02). Between-person analyses showed similar patterns. Infants with a more consistent bedtime routine and who were not typically fed to sleep at bedtime had longer nighttime TST at 6 weeks, with a trend or no association at later ages. Conclusion: Infants who fell asleep earlier also slept longer at night. Keeping infants up later in hopes of them sleeping in longer may be counterproductive.
AB - Objective/background: Clinical recommendations include putting infants to bed using a consistent bedtime routine at an appropriate hour to promote longer nighttime sleep. Actigraphy was used in this exploratory study to examine how bedtime routines and nighttime sleep onset were associated with nighttime total sleep time (TST) and efficiency from 6 to 24 weeks of age. Patients/methods: Infants (n = 24) wore sleep actigraphs for three, one-week periods at 6, 15, and 24 weeks of age. Nighttime TST, sleep efficiency, sleep onset and offset were quantified. Mothers reported on infant bedtime routines using the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire at each age. Multilevel models examined between- and within-person associations. Results: As infants aged, sleep onset was earlier, and bedtime routines became shorter (p's < 0.05). Infants fell asleep between 7 and 8:00PM on 24% of the nights. Most mothers (70%) reported that they often fed infants to sleep for the night. For every 1 h earlier in infants' usual sleep onset, nighttime TST was 34.4 min longer that night (p < 0.01). Infants with earlier than usual sleep onset had slightly earlier sleep offset the next morning (8.4 min for every 1 h earlier in onset; p = 0.02). Between-person analyses showed similar patterns. Infants with a more consistent bedtime routine and who were not typically fed to sleep at bedtime had longer nighttime TST at 6 weeks, with a trend or no association at later ages. Conclusion: Infants who fell asleep earlier also slept longer at night. Keeping infants up later in hopes of them sleeping in longer may be counterproductive.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.sleep.2020.07.003
DO - 10.1016/j.sleep.2020.07.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 32861189
AN - SCOPUS:85089819135
SN - 1389-9457
VL - 73
SP - 238
EP - 245
JO - Sleep Medicine
JF - Sleep Medicine
ER -