This is the first study to examine the long - term outcomes of sleep problems in a community sample of infants, together with the long - term impact of a behavioral sleep
intervention on infant sleep problems.
Not exact matches
Read more about API's response to the recently published Pediatrics study
on «behavioral
infant sleep intervention» that's garnering headlines that
sleep training is safe.
Laboratory studies reveal that the average duration of
infant and maternal awakenings in the cosleeping environment are shorter
on average than the awakenings mothers and babies experience when baby awakens in another room, and requires
intervention before going back to
sleep (see Mosko et al 1997).
Infants in these societies are typically breastfed on demand, held close to a parent nearly all the time, are responded to immediately when they cry, birth is a natural event free of interventions (and babies are immediately given to mom post-birth), and infants sleep close to their care
Infants in these societies are typically breastfed
on demand, held close to a parent nearly all the time, are responded to immediately when they cry, birth is a natural event free of
interventions (and babies are immediately given to mom post-birth), and
infants sleep close to their care
infants sleep close to their caregivers.
Sleep: from 0 to 6 months: anticipatory guidance on normal infant sleep and positive bedtime routines; from 6 months onwards: a behavioural sleep intervention; 5
Sleep: from 0 to 6 months: anticipatory guidance
on normal
infant sleep and positive bedtime routines; from 6 months onwards: a behavioural sleep intervention; 5
sleep and positive bedtime routines; from 6 months onwards: a behavioural
sleep intervention; 5
sleep intervention; 53, 54
Behavioural
infant sleep intervention does not have long - lasting effects
on children's emotions or behaviour, or maternal outcomes
By participating in an
intervention that focused
on interpreting
infants» cues, mothers may have been able to resist the cultural norm of using complementary food to manage their
infant's crying and
sleeping behavior.
Because decisions about feeding are often made by grandmothers, based
on their beliefs that complementary foods reduce
infants» crying and promote nighttime
sleeping, the
intervention was designed to include mother — grandmother negotiation strategies, communication strategies to read
infants» cues, and behavioral strategies, other than feeding, to manage crying and
sleeping.