TY - JOUR PY - 2015// TI - Children's night waking among toddlers: relationships with mothers' and fathers' parenting approaches and children's behavioural difficulties JO - Journal of Advanced Nursing A1 - Zaidman-Zait, Anat A1 - Hall, Wendy A. SP - 1639 EP - 1649 VL - 71 IS - 7 N2 - AIMS: To explore associations between children's sleep problems, and behavioural difficulties and parenting approaches.

BACKGROUND: Children commonly have problematic night waking; however, relationships between parenting cognitions and behaviours and children's sleep problems are rarely examined.

DESIGN: Longitudinal children's cohort study from 5-29 months post birth.

METHODS: Data were taken from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development (1998-2007) at three phases: 5, 17 and 29 months of age. Thousand four hundred and eighty-seven families were included in our study based on: participation from phase 1 (5-months old), both parents' reports on parenting cognitions/behaviours and child behavioural difficulties at 29 months, and mothers' reports of children's sleep at 29 months. In 2013, we conducted repeated measures anovas and manovas including children's gender.

RESULTS: Extended night-time waking patterns (wakes of ≥20 minutes) were associated with mothers' and fathers' lower sense of parenting impact and higher overprotectiveness and mothers' lower self-efficacy and higher coerciveness for 29-month-old children. In the extended waking group, mothers consistently reported lower self-efficacy, higher overprotectiveness and lower parenting impact at 5, 17 and 29 months. For those children, fathers were only more overprotective at 5 and 29 months. Regarding 29-month-old children's behaviour, children in the extended night waking group had highest scores on externalizing and internalizing behaviours. Girls had higher scores on shyness/inhibition and boys had higher scores on aggression/hyperactivity.

CONCLUSION: Mothers' and fathers' parenting cognitions and behaviours are affected by 29-month-old children's night waking patterns and night waking patterns are associated with children's behavioural problems.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0309-2402 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jan.12636 ID - ref1 ER -