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Questions about sleep – from newborns to teenagers – are among the most common in pediatric practice. A good night’s sleep is in everyone’s best interest for daily functioning and healthy development. Asking about sleep also provides a window into the family’s perspectives on discipline, parental cooperation, family stresses, and views on a child’s developing autonomy.

During their first year, infants may need as many as 18 hours of sleep daily, and the duration of sleep gradually declines thereafter to 8-10 hours nightly in adolescence. Sleep plays an essential role in consolidating memories, attention, and other cognitive functions; the immune system; and metabolism. Additionally, developing healthy sleep habits is one of the first and most profound ways that children learn to expect consistency from their parents, to soothe themselves, and to manage limits. As a child grows, her ability to plan, manage anxiety, and exercise discipline is cultivated through managing her sleep with increasing independence.

Dr. Susan D. Swick

Preschoolers who are not getting adequate sleep may have behavioral problems, particularly in new settings (like school) or at transitional times (like bedtime). When a preschooler presents with hyperactivity, irritability, and tantrums, or failure to keep up with developmental expectations, asking about sleep patterns is a good early step. Although sleep disruption may be symptomatic of psychiatric disorders related to mood, anxiety, or attention, before you consider a disorder and treatment make sure that tensions at bedtime and poor sleeping habits are not a major factor.

How do you help tired, stressed parents encourage or enforce healthy sleep habits? Does the family have a routine after dinner that allows a child to settle down (such as taking a bath and then a quiet activity like reading a book with a parent)? Are the parents able to enforce this routine consistently, or does bedtime get dragged out for hours? And if so, why? In addition to ensuring that a child gets enough exercise during the day (but not in the hour before bed), parents will need to turn off the lights at a reasonably early hour so that a child may get adequate sleep before they will awaken with daylight.

Many parents will delay sleep until later as children push to stay awake and play. Sometimes, if both parents work and feel their only time with their children is after they return from work well into the evening, they may want more time with their children or feel guilty about having a strict, early bedtime routine. Reassure parents that even a short stretch of quality time with their children (reading to them, snuggling, asking about their day) is enough to nurture a profound connection.

"Screen time" merits special mention, especially in younger children. Letting children watch television or play on computers in order to "unwind" at the end of a long day is common, but in the time before bed, screen content can be very disruptive to restful sleep. Parents should assess if "screen time" is helping or hurting their child’s ability to fall asleep. Some families have found it helpful to have no screen time (any screen: television, computer, tablet, or cell phone) within 1 hour of lights going out: back-lit screens suppress endogenous melatonin release and can delay sleep. With school-age children, reading at bedtime is certainly preferable to an additional hour of computer time.

It is also worth asking where a child is sleeping. Do they have their own bed? Are they alone in their room? Is their room on the same level of the house as their parents’ room? Children who are anxious may sleep better if they share a room with a sibling or are close to their parents’ room. On the other hand, if they sleep with a sibling who is waking often during the night, they may have disrupted sleep.

Dr. Michael Jellinek

It is worth finding out if a child is able to sleep through the night in their own bed. Many children have their own bed and room, but have a routine of sleeping in their parents’ bed. This usually results in inadequate sleep for both child and parents, and a child who does not learn how to appropriately soothe himself. Is it permissible for a child to climb into their parents’ bed in the middle of the night once in a while, if they have a bad dream, do not feel well, or have faced a stressful day? Yes. Is a child arguing to go to sleep in their parents’ bed, refusing to sleep in their own bed, with their parents "giving in"? Then it is a habit worth undoing.

 

 

School-age children who are not getting adequate sleep also may appear more irritable, forgetful, and inattentive, and they may have problems with academic, athletic, and social performance. These are years in which children start to have more independence and responsibility for their bedtime routines. They may have greater access to screens in the evening, and may be in charge of setting an alarm or turning their light out. These are also years in which children are more likely to experience anxiety, as they face and manage a host of new challenges. Anxiety can be very disruptive of restful sleep, and will in turn cause more problems about which these children get anxious. Alongside their greater responsibility, school-age children still need basic and consistently enforced ground rules about sleep in order to build independence. Clearly at this age, reading before bedtime is a good option.

Parents should help their school-age children to start their homework early, and to enjoy screen time, but not within an hour of bedtime, and to follow a consistent (and more independent) routine before bed. Do they have a consistent bedtime? Do they take a shower or bath each night? (A hot shower or bath naturally cues the body that it is time for sleep as the body’s core temperature rises and then drops.) Do they read before lights out? Is the house quiet at their bedtime? Parents should also find out if their children have worries that are making it difficult to go to sleep. Are they worried about a test or big game? Or about bigger issues of safety? Parents can help a child to discuss their worries and address those that are addressable; usually, this is enough to help children learn to master their worries. When a school-age child’s anxiety does not improve with open discussion, then it may be helpful to have a more formal evaluation for anxiety with a mental health clinician.

Adolescence is a time in which sleep patterns naturally shift, while the need for sleep remains robust. Teenagers become tired later and need to sleep in until later in the morning, just at the same time that school demands impinge on sleep with an earlier start to the day and more extensive homework at night. Older adolescents may go out with friends on weekends and shift their bedtime routine by 4 or more hours for two nights out of every seven, which is as profoundly disruptive to restful sleep as traveling across four time zones and back every week. These are years in which more independence can again lead to more screen use in the evening, whether for writing a paper on a computer or texting a friend late into the night.

An adolescent who is sleep deprived may have low energy, be forgetful and distractible, and see their academic and athletic performance suffer. They may appear more withdrawn or moody. This is an age in which serious mood problems, such as depression, are more likely to emerge, and are associated with sleep problems. But these problems will not improve with simple sleep hygiene interventions; thus, the teens who do not get better after these interventions may need a psychiatric evaluation.

The strategies that might help adolescents are not much different from those for younger children. It is important with adolescents, however, to explain why they should exercise regularly, have a consistent bedtime routine, and not bring their cell phone to bed. While parents should still be able to set and enforce ground rules, they also need to be equipping their adolescents to understand and manage their sleep independently, which they will need to do soon enough. Encouraging self-regulation between ages 13 and 17 is essential as college or independence approaches, and efforts at control are hard to enforce and send the wrong message.

Inconsistent, inadequate sleep often reflects what has been a frustrating struggle for parents. Asking questions about sleep gives parents the supportive message that sleep is challenging and important, and may empower them to approach it with renewed firmness and clarity. When you help parents to set routines and limits that support consistent, adequate sleep, their children will be on a path to healthy development.

Dr. Swick is an attending psychiatrist in the division of child psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and director of the Parenting at a Challenging Time (PACT) Program at the Vernon Cancer Center at Newton Wellesley Hospital, also in Boston. Dr. Jellinek is professor of psychiatry and of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, Boston. E-mail them at pdnews@frontlinemedcom.com.

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Questions about sleep – from newborns to teenagers – are among the most common in pediatric practice. A good night’s sleep is in everyone’s best interest for daily functioning and healthy development. Asking about sleep also provides a window into the family’s perspectives on discipline, parental cooperation, family stresses, and views on a child’s developing autonomy.

During their first year, infants may need as many as 18 hours of sleep daily, and the duration of sleep gradually declines thereafter to 8-10 hours nightly in adolescence. Sleep plays an essential role in consolidating memories, attention, and other cognitive functions; the immune system; and metabolism. Additionally, developing healthy sleep habits is one of the first and most profound ways that children learn to expect consistency from their parents, to soothe themselves, and to manage limits. As a child grows, her ability to plan, manage anxiety, and exercise discipline is cultivated through managing her sleep with increasing independence.

Dr. Susan D. Swick

Preschoolers who are not getting adequate sleep may have behavioral problems, particularly in new settings (like school) or at transitional times (like bedtime). When a preschooler presents with hyperactivity, irritability, and tantrums, or failure to keep up with developmental expectations, asking about sleep patterns is a good early step. Although sleep disruption may be symptomatic of psychiatric disorders related to mood, anxiety, or attention, before you consider a disorder and treatment make sure that tensions at bedtime and poor sleeping habits are not a major factor.

How do you help tired, stressed parents encourage or enforce healthy sleep habits? Does the family have a routine after dinner that allows a child to settle down (such as taking a bath and then a quiet activity like reading a book with a parent)? Are the parents able to enforce this routine consistently, or does bedtime get dragged out for hours? And if so, why? In addition to ensuring that a child gets enough exercise during the day (but not in the hour before bed), parents will need to turn off the lights at a reasonably early hour so that a child may get adequate sleep before they will awaken with daylight.

Many parents will delay sleep until later as children push to stay awake and play. Sometimes, if both parents work and feel their only time with their children is after they return from work well into the evening, they may want more time with their children or feel guilty about having a strict, early bedtime routine. Reassure parents that even a short stretch of quality time with their children (reading to them, snuggling, asking about their day) is enough to nurture a profound connection.

"Screen time" merits special mention, especially in younger children. Letting children watch television or play on computers in order to "unwind" at the end of a long day is common, but in the time before bed, screen content can be very disruptive to restful sleep. Parents should assess if "screen time" is helping or hurting their child’s ability to fall asleep. Some families have found it helpful to have no screen time (any screen: television, computer, tablet, or cell phone) within 1 hour of lights going out: back-lit screens suppress endogenous melatonin release and can delay sleep. With school-age children, reading at bedtime is certainly preferable to an additional hour of computer time.

It is also worth asking where a child is sleeping. Do they have their own bed? Are they alone in their room? Is their room on the same level of the house as their parents’ room? Children who are anxious may sleep better if they share a room with a sibling or are close to their parents’ room. On the other hand, if they sleep with a sibling who is waking often during the night, they may have disrupted sleep.

Dr. Michael Jellinek

It is worth finding out if a child is able to sleep through the night in their own bed. Many children have their own bed and room, but have a routine of sleeping in their parents’ bed. This usually results in inadequate sleep for both child and parents, and a child who does not learn how to appropriately soothe himself. Is it permissible for a child to climb into their parents’ bed in the middle of the night once in a while, if they have a bad dream, do not feel well, or have faced a stressful day? Yes. Is a child arguing to go to sleep in their parents’ bed, refusing to sleep in their own bed, with their parents "giving in"? Then it is a habit worth undoing.

 

 

School-age children who are not getting adequate sleep also may appear more irritable, forgetful, and inattentive, and they may have problems with academic, athletic, and social performance. These are years in which children start to have more independence and responsibility for their bedtime routines. They may have greater access to screens in the evening, and may be in charge of setting an alarm or turning their light out. These are also years in which children are more likely to experience anxiety, as they face and manage a host of new challenges. Anxiety can be very disruptive of restful sleep, and will in turn cause more problems about which these children get anxious. Alongside their greater responsibility, school-age children still need basic and consistently enforced ground rules about sleep in order to build independence. Clearly at this age, reading before bedtime is a good option.

Parents should help their school-age children to start their homework early, and to enjoy screen time, but not within an hour of bedtime, and to follow a consistent (and more independent) routine before bed. Do they have a consistent bedtime? Do they take a shower or bath each night? (A hot shower or bath naturally cues the body that it is time for sleep as the body’s core temperature rises and then drops.) Do they read before lights out? Is the house quiet at their bedtime? Parents should also find out if their children have worries that are making it difficult to go to sleep. Are they worried about a test or big game? Or about bigger issues of safety? Parents can help a child to discuss their worries and address those that are addressable; usually, this is enough to help children learn to master their worries. When a school-age child’s anxiety does not improve with open discussion, then it may be helpful to have a more formal evaluation for anxiety with a mental health clinician.

Adolescence is a time in which sleep patterns naturally shift, while the need for sleep remains robust. Teenagers become tired later and need to sleep in until later in the morning, just at the same time that school demands impinge on sleep with an earlier start to the day and more extensive homework at night. Older adolescents may go out with friends on weekends and shift their bedtime routine by 4 or more hours for two nights out of every seven, which is as profoundly disruptive to restful sleep as traveling across four time zones and back every week. These are years in which more independence can again lead to more screen use in the evening, whether for writing a paper on a computer or texting a friend late into the night.

An adolescent who is sleep deprived may have low energy, be forgetful and distractible, and see their academic and athletic performance suffer. They may appear more withdrawn or moody. This is an age in which serious mood problems, such as depression, are more likely to emerge, and are associated with sleep problems. But these problems will not improve with simple sleep hygiene interventions; thus, the teens who do not get better after these interventions may need a psychiatric evaluation.

The strategies that might help adolescents are not much different from those for younger children. It is important with adolescents, however, to explain why they should exercise regularly, have a consistent bedtime routine, and not bring their cell phone to bed. While parents should still be able to set and enforce ground rules, they also need to be equipping their adolescents to understand and manage their sleep independently, which they will need to do soon enough. Encouraging self-regulation between ages 13 and 17 is essential as college or independence approaches, and efforts at control are hard to enforce and send the wrong message.

Inconsistent, inadequate sleep often reflects what has been a frustrating struggle for parents. Asking questions about sleep gives parents the supportive message that sleep is challenging and important, and may empower them to approach it with renewed firmness and clarity. When you help parents to set routines and limits that support consistent, adequate sleep, their children will be on a path to healthy development.

Dr. Swick is an attending psychiatrist in the division of child psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and director of the Parenting at a Challenging Time (PACT) Program at the Vernon Cancer Center at Newton Wellesley Hospital, also in Boston. Dr. Jellinek is professor of psychiatry and of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, Boston. E-mail them at pdnews@frontlinemedcom.com.

Questions about sleep – from newborns to teenagers – are among the most common in pediatric practice. A good night’s sleep is in everyone’s best interest for daily functioning and healthy development. Asking about sleep also provides a window into the family’s perspectives on discipline, parental cooperation, family stresses, and views on a child’s developing autonomy.

During their first year, infants may need as many as 18 hours of sleep daily, and the duration of sleep gradually declines thereafter to 8-10 hours nightly in adolescence. Sleep plays an essential role in consolidating memories, attention, and other cognitive functions; the immune system; and metabolism. Additionally, developing healthy sleep habits is one of the first and most profound ways that children learn to expect consistency from their parents, to soothe themselves, and to manage limits. As a child grows, her ability to plan, manage anxiety, and exercise discipline is cultivated through managing her sleep with increasing independence.

Dr. Susan D. Swick

Preschoolers who are not getting adequate sleep may have behavioral problems, particularly in new settings (like school) or at transitional times (like bedtime). When a preschooler presents with hyperactivity, irritability, and tantrums, or failure to keep up with developmental expectations, asking about sleep patterns is a good early step. Although sleep disruption may be symptomatic of psychiatric disorders related to mood, anxiety, or attention, before you consider a disorder and treatment make sure that tensions at bedtime and poor sleeping habits are not a major factor.

How do you help tired, stressed parents encourage or enforce healthy sleep habits? Does the family have a routine after dinner that allows a child to settle down (such as taking a bath and then a quiet activity like reading a book with a parent)? Are the parents able to enforce this routine consistently, or does bedtime get dragged out for hours? And if so, why? In addition to ensuring that a child gets enough exercise during the day (but not in the hour before bed), parents will need to turn off the lights at a reasonably early hour so that a child may get adequate sleep before they will awaken with daylight.

Many parents will delay sleep until later as children push to stay awake and play. Sometimes, if both parents work and feel their only time with their children is after they return from work well into the evening, they may want more time with their children or feel guilty about having a strict, early bedtime routine. Reassure parents that even a short stretch of quality time with their children (reading to them, snuggling, asking about their day) is enough to nurture a profound connection.

"Screen time" merits special mention, especially in younger children. Letting children watch television or play on computers in order to "unwind" at the end of a long day is common, but in the time before bed, screen content can be very disruptive to restful sleep. Parents should assess if "screen time" is helping or hurting their child’s ability to fall asleep. Some families have found it helpful to have no screen time (any screen: television, computer, tablet, or cell phone) within 1 hour of lights going out: back-lit screens suppress endogenous melatonin release and can delay sleep. With school-age children, reading at bedtime is certainly preferable to an additional hour of computer time.

It is also worth asking where a child is sleeping. Do they have their own bed? Are they alone in their room? Is their room on the same level of the house as their parents’ room? Children who are anxious may sleep better if they share a room with a sibling or are close to their parents’ room. On the other hand, if they sleep with a sibling who is waking often during the night, they may have disrupted sleep.

Dr. Michael Jellinek

It is worth finding out if a child is able to sleep through the night in their own bed. Many children have their own bed and room, but have a routine of sleeping in their parents’ bed. This usually results in inadequate sleep for both child and parents, and a child who does not learn how to appropriately soothe himself. Is it permissible for a child to climb into their parents’ bed in the middle of the night once in a while, if they have a bad dream, do not feel well, or have faced a stressful day? Yes. Is a child arguing to go to sleep in their parents’ bed, refusing to sleep in their own bed, with their parents "giving in"? Then it is a habit worth undoing.

 

 

School-age children who are not getting adequate sleep also may appear more irritable, forgetful, and inattentive, and they may have problems with academic, athletic, and social performance. These are years in which children start to have more independence and responsibility for their bedtime routines. They may have greater access to screens in the evening, and may be in charge of setting an alarm or turning their light out. These are also years in which children are more likely to experience anxiety, as they face and manage a host of new challenges. Anxiety can be very disruptive of restful sleep, and will in turn cause more problems about which these children get anxious. Alongside their greater responsibility, school-age children still need basic and consistently enforced ground rules about sleep in order to build independence. Clearly at this age, reading before bedtime is a good option.

Parents should help their school-age children to start their homework early, and to enjoy screen time, but not within an hour of bedtime, and to follow a consistent (and more independent) routine before bed. Do they have a consistent bedtime? Do they take a shower or bath each night? (A hot shower or bath naturally cues the body that it is time for sleep as the body’s core temperature rises and then drops.) Do they read before lights out? Is the house quiet at their bedtime? Parents should also find out if their children have worries that are making it difficult to go to sleep. Are they worried about a test or big game? Or about bigger issues of safety? Parents can help a child to discuss their worries and address those that are addressable; usually, this is enough to help children learn to master their worries. When a school-age child’s anxiety does not improve with open discussion, then it may be helpful to have a more formal evaluation for anxiety with a mental health clinician.

Adolescence is a time in which sleep patterns naturally shift, while the need for sleep remains robust. Teenagers become tired later and need to sleep in until later in the morning, just at the same time that school demands impinge on sleep with an earlier start to the day and more extensive homework at night. Older adolescents may go out with friends on weekends and shift their bedtime routine by 4 or more hours for two nights out of every seven, which is as profoundly disruptive to restful sleep as traveling across four time zones and back every week. These are years in which more independence can again lead to more screen use in the evening, whether for writing a paper on a computer or texting a friend late into the night.

An adolescent who is sleep deprived may have low energy, be forgetful and distractible, and see their academic and athletic performance suffer. They may appear more withdrawn or moody. This is an age in which serious mood problems, such as depression, are more likely to emerge, and are associated with sleep problems. But these problems will not improve with simple sleep hygiene interventions; thus, the teens who do not get better after these interventions may need a psychiatric evaluation.

The strategies that might help adolescents are not much different from those for younger children. It is important with adolescents, however, to explain why they should exercise regularly, have a consistent bedtime routine, and not bring their cell phone to bed. While parents should still be able to set and enforce ground rules, they also need to be equipping their adolescents to understand and manage their sleep independently, which they will need to do soon enough. Encouraging self-regulation between ages 13 and 17 is essential as college or independence approaches, and efforts at control are hard to enforce and send the wrong message.

Inconsistent, inadequate sleep often reflects what has been a frustrating struggle for parents. Asking questions about sleep gives parents the supportive message that sleep is challenging and important, and may empower them to approach it with renewed firmness and clarity. When you help parents to set routines and limits that support consistent, adequate sleep, their children will be on a path to healthy development.

Dr. Swick is an attending psychiatrist in the division of child psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and director of the Parenting at a Challenging Time (PACT) Program at the Vernon Cancer Center at Newton Wellesley Hospital, also in Boston. Dr. Jellinek is professor of psychiatry and of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, Boston. E-mail them at pdnews@frontlinemedcom.com.

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