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Release Date: February 11, 2000
Contact: Scott Turner
(401) 863-2476
scott_turner@brown.edu
School-Aged Children Need Screening For Sleep Disturbances
Sleep disturbances may be more common among school-aged children than previously
recognized, according to a study of children in kindergarten through fourth grades.
"Despite increasing evidence of the importance of sleep on children's health
and functioning, many sleep disorders in middle childhood still go unrecognized by health
care providers," said lead author Judith A. Owens, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor at
Brown University and affiliated with the Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence.
Owens and colleagues found that 37 percent of 494 school-aged study participants
suffered from at least one sleep-related problem. Their findings appear in the February
issue of the Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics.
Sleep-related problems included bedtime resistance, sleep anxiety, difficulty in
falling or remaining asleep, behaviors such as bedwetting or sleepwalking, breathing
conditions including snoring or gasping during sleep, and daytime sleepiness.
The researchers collected data from the children, as well as from their parents and
teachers. Collecting data from parents alone may give an incomplete picture of childhood
sleep behavior, according to Owens. Teachers, for example, noted higher levels of daytime
sleepiness in younger children than in older, while parents did not. "This finding
underscores the potential importance of obtaining teacher observations when assessing
children for daytime repercussions of disordered sleep," said Owens.
"Teachers are routinely observing children in a different environment and under a
different level of stimulation than are parents," she added.
The reports of children themselves are equally important, according to the researchers,
who noted discrepancies between parents and children's reports. Children reported
higher levels of certain sleep problems, like difficulty falling asleep and waking in the
night, than did their parents, the researchers found.
In general, Owens and colleagues found sleep-related problems particularly
bedtime struggles and night wakings to be more
prevalent among kindergartners through second graders than among third and fourth graders.
"Primary care providers are generally aware of sleep issues in infants and
toddlers but often fail to adequately screen children past the pre-school years for sleep
problems in the clinical setting," said Owens.
"The results of this study emphasize the importance of screening school-aged
children for sleep problems and the need for health care providers to understand the
possible consequences of disordered sleep on children's daily lives," said
Owens.
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The Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics is
published bimonthly by the Society for Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics. For
information about the journal, contact Mary Sharkey at (212) 595-7717.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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