Michal Kahn1, Yasmin Bauminger2, Ella Volkovich2, Gal Meiri3, Avi Sadeh1, Liat Tikotzky4. 1. The School of Psychological Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel. 2. Department of Psychology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. 3. Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. 4. Department of Psychology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel. Electronic address: liatti@bgu.ac.il.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low parental tolerance for crying has been associated with infant sleep problems, yet the directionality of this link remained unclear. This longitudinal study aimed to assess the synchronous and prospective bidirectional links between parental cry-tolerance, soothing, and infant sleep from pregnancy through six months postpartum. METHODS: Sixty-five couples were recruited during pregnancy and assessed for cry-tolerance using a paradigm in which participants were shown a videotape of a crying infant and were asked to stop the video when they feel it is necessary to intervene. Infant sleep was assessed objectively using actigraphy for five nights at three and six months postpartum. Parental soothing techniques were reported by parents at both assessment points, and cry-tolerance was reassessed at six months. RESULTS: Concomitant associations were found between maternal cry-tolerance and infant sleep at six months, indicating that lower maternal cry-tolerance was correlated with poorer actigraphic sleep quality. Furthermore, Structural Equation Modeling analyses yielded significant prospective associations, showing that lower cry-tolerance at pregnancy predicted better infant sleep at three months, whereas more disrupted sleep at three months predicted lower cry-tolerance at six months. Moreover, fathers showed higher cry-tolerance compared to mothers, and parents became more similar to each other across time in their reactivity to infant crying. CONCLUSION: Consistent with the transactional model of infant sleep, the findings of this study highlight the role of parental cry-tolerance in infant sleep development, and demonstrate bidirectional links between this construct and infant sleep throughout the first six months of life.
BACKGROUND: Low parental tolerance for crying has been associated with infant sleep problems, yet the directionality of this link remained unclear. This longitudinal study aimed to assess the synchronous and prospective bidirectional links between parental cry-tolerance, soothing, and infant sleep from pregnancy through six months postpartum. METHODS: Sixty-five couples were recruited during pregnancy and assessed for cry-tolerance using a paradigm in which participants were shown a videotape of a crying infant and were asked to stop the video when they feel it is necessary to intervene. Infant sleep was assessed objectively using actigraphy for five nights at three and six months postpartum. Parental soothing techniques were reported by parents at both assessment points, and cry-tolerance was reassessed at six months. RESULTS: Concomitant associations were found between maternal cry-tolerance and infant sleep at six months, indicating that lower maternal cry-tolerance was correlated with poorer actigraphic sleep quality. Furthermore, Structural Equation Modeling analyses yielded significant prospective associations, showing that lower cry-tolerance at pregnancy predicted better infant sleep at three months, whereas more disrupted sleep at three months predicted lower cry-tolerance at six months. Moreover, fathers showed higher cry-tolerance compared to mothers, and parents became more similar to each other across time in their reactivity to infant crying. CONCLUSION: Consistent with the transactional model of infant sleep, the findings of this study highlight the role of parental cry-tolerance in infant sleep development, and demonstrate bidirectional links between this construct and infant sleep throughout the first six months of life.
Authors: Amy R Goetz; Dean W Beebe; James L Peugh; Constance A Mara; Bruce P Lanphear; Joseph M Braun; Kimberly Yolton; Lori J Stark Journal: Sleep Date: 2019-02-01 Impact factor: 5.849
Authors: Michal Kahn; Efrat Livne-Karp; Michal Juda-Hanael; Haim Omer; Liat Tikotzky; Thomas F Anders; Avi Sadeh Journal: J Clin Sleep Med Date: 2020-08-15 Impact factor: 4.062