Parent-child co-sleeping is a common practice in many cultures, although in Western countries, families who engage in parent-child co-sleeping can encounter attitudes about co-sleeping that feel critical from the people around them, as it is not commonly accepted and often stigmatized. This systematic scoping review examined and synthesized the available literature on the attitudes about parent-child co-sleeping that people encounter, their origins, and their effect on parents' own attitudes and behaviors. A total of 9796 abstracts were screened, and 33 studies were included. While the scope of the literature on this topic was narrow, this review demonstrated that parents/caregivers mostly encounter encouraging attitudes about co-sleeping from their extended family members and within their culture and discouraging attitudes from healthcare professionals. Findings suggest that encouraging attitudes enhance the likelihood of parents engaging and continuing with co-sleeping behavior, while discouraging attitudes can lead to the avoidance of parents discussing sleep with their healthcare professionals and can cause conflicts with other family members, including partners. Based on these findings, we conclude that further research is needed in several areas related to co-sleeping in Western culture, most specifically in how external attitudes influence the decision to co-sleep, as well as other behaviors and cognitions such as engagement with healthcare professionals, family satisfaction, parental self-efficacy, and overall mental health.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/famp.13022 | DOI Listing |
Fam Process
December 2024
Faculty of Education, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Parent-child co-sleeping is a common practice in many cultures, although in Western countries, families who engage in parent-child co-sleeping can encounter attitudes about co-sleeping that feel critical from the people around them, as it is not commonly accepted and often stigmatized. This systematic scoping review examined and synthesized the available literature on the attitudes about parent-child co-sleeping that people encounter, their origins, and their effect on parents' own attitudes and behaviors. A total of 9796 abstracts were screened, and 33 studies were included.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Sleep Med
April 2023
School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Introduction: Explanatory models of behavioral insomnia typically draw on operant learning theory with behavioral techniques focused on altering parent-child interactions to improve sleep. However, there are no data describing parent-child interactions overnight beyond parent report. In this study we used radio frequency identification technology to quantify parent-child proximity overnight in two groups at elevated risk of behavioral insomnia, Angelman syndrome (AS) and Smith-Magenis syndrome (SMS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSleep Health
October 2023
Evolutionary Parenting, 116 County Rd, 16 Milford, ON, K0K 2P0, Canada.
Infant sleep problems are one of the commonly reported reasons parents seek professional help, yet what constitutes a "sleep problem" depends on the models used to explain the development of infant sleep. The current models are based on research conducted in the western context where infant solitary sleeping is the norm. Parent-child co-sleeping is the norm in many cultures around the world.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZ Geburtshilfe Neonatol
October 2021
Sektion Neonatologie und Pädiatrische Intensivmedizin, Zentrum für Geburtshilfe, Kinder- und Jugendmedizin, Universitätsklinikum Eppendorf (UKE).
das "Bed-sharing", mitunter auch als "Co-sleeping" bezeichnet, also der gemeinsame Schlaf von Mutter/Vater und Kind (<1 Jahr) im gleichen Bett, gilt - unter anderem wegen der drohenden Behinderung der freien Atmung - als Risikofaktor für den plötzlichen Säuglingstod, sodass in vielen Empfehlungen zum "sicheren Babyschlaf" mehr oder weniger pauschal davon abgeraten wird. Dies steht in gewissem Kontrast zu der Tatsache, dass das Bed-sharing weltweit enorm verbreitet ist, und lässt vielleicht auch andere Faktoren, wie die Rolle des kindlichen Alters oder die Auswirkungen auf die mütterliche Stillbereitschaft, zu sehr außer Acht. In einer interessanten Übersichtsarbeit im "Fokus Hebammenwissenschaft" dieser Zeitschrift werden daher die Empfehlungen zur Prophylaxe des Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) in Europäischen Ländern mit besonders niedriger (Griechenland, Italien, Niederlande) und besonders hoher SIDS-Inzidenz (UK, Österreich, Frankreich) analysiert und der aktuellen Evidenzlage gegenübergestellt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Genet Psychol
November 2021
Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA.
Bedsharing (sharing a bed with others during sleep) in early childhood (3-5 years old) is common across Western and non-Western societies alike. Though prior work indicates that bedsharing may relate to impairments in child sleep quantity or quality, the majority of studies conducted in young children are limited to parent-child bedsharing and rely almost exclusively on caregiver reports to measure child sleep. Here, the authors endeavored to gain further insights into the diversity of bedsharing practices among children in the United States, including how different bedsharing partners (caregivers, siblings) might impact actigraphy-derived measures of children's sleep.
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