This study contributes to the growing body of research providing support for
sleep interventions within the domain of occupational therapy.
I think this study says way more about how beneficial support for trusting your instincts about what your specific child needs is than it does about any
specific sleep intervention.
According to a recent study on
baby sleep intervention, baby sleep problems are linked to maternal depression and other long - term problems.
Because of the negative side - effects of pharmacological interventions, adults with dis - ordered sleep are increasingly seeking
non-pharmacological sleep interventions such as natural supplements (e.g., melatonin, valerian, and tryptophan), meditation, and sleep hygiene programs (Henry et al., 2013).
A follow - up community survey was conducted of mothers of children aged 3 to 4 years who had, as 8 - to 10 - month - old infants with identified sleep problems, participated in a community - based, randomized, controlled trial of a
brief sleep intervention from 3 middle - class local government areas in Melbourne, Australia.
We are members of the International Association of Childhood Sleep Consultants and each consultant is certified for behavioural
sleep interventions with twins, children with learning disabilities, ADD / ADHD and Autism Spectrum Disorder.
«
Whether sleep interventions aimed at increasing sleep duration would protect individuals from cold incidence remains an open question.»
This means we may have early and important opportunities to
provide sleep interventions that may have a real impact on these children's general health and their development.»
Behavioural infant
sleep intervention does not have long - lasting effects on children's emotions or behaviour, or maternal outcomes
There are now 20 nurses delivering the
successful sleep intervention to children starting school and their families in 40 schools across the South Eastern Victorian Region.
Meanwhile, the participants in the «interventions» group were told about a variety
of sleep interventions, including controlled crying (aka «the Ferber method») and what the study calls «adult fading» or «camping out,» which sounds to me like the old «I'll lie on the floor next to your crib until you fall asleep» that many of us know and still have the rug marks on our faces to show for it.
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.
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.
The article «Five - Year Follow - up of Harms and Benefits of Behavioral Infant
Sleep Intervention: Randomized Trial» published September 10, 2012 by the journal Pediatrics details the methodology and findings of an Australian study conducted in 2003 - 2005 called the Infant Sleep Study, along with the methodology and findings of a follow - up with the participants in the Infant Sleep Study conducted in 2009 and called the Kids Sleep Study.
Price AM, Wake M, Ukoumunne OC, Hiscock H. Five - Year Follow - up of Harms and Benefits of Behavioral Infant
Sleep Intervention: Randomized Trial.
Five - Year Follow - up of Harms and Benefits of Behavioral Infant
Sleep Intervention: Randomized Trial.
Long - term mother and child mental health effects of a population - based infant
sleep intervention: Cluster - randomized, controlled trial.
Five - year follow - up of harms and benefits of behavioral infant
sleep intervention: Randomized trial.
Long - term mother and child mental health effects of a population - based infant
sleep intervention: cluster - randomized, controlled trial.
Five - year follow - up of harms and benefits of behavioral infant
sleep intervention: randomized trial.
In fact, one study published in the American Academy of Pediatrics, which included 225 families with babies from 8 to 10 months using various «behavioral infant
sleep intervention,» noted that after a five year period there were «no marked long - lasting effects» on either the children, the parents, or their relationships with each other.
Randomised controlled trial of behavioural infant
sleep intervention to improve infant sleep and maternal mood.
Infant
sleep intervention or Nazi drill?
Long - term Mother and Child Mental Health Effects of a Population - Based Infant
Sleep Intervention: Cluster - Randomized, Controlled Trial
The research also correlated results from numerous brain - wave studies and experiments dealing with sleep deprivation, napping and
sleep intervention, such as sleep medications.
Half of the 320 children taking part will get
the sleep intervention, while the other half will form the comparison group.
In 1998, we conducted a randomized, controlled trial of a simple, behavioral infant
sleep intervention (the Infant Sleep Study) that led to significant reductions in infant sleep problems and maternal report of depression symptoms 4 months later.10 In 2001, when the children were aged 3 to 4 years, we followed the participants of the earlier trial, all of whom had sleep problems at entry to the Infant Sleep Study.