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  • Behavioral Sleep-Related Problems in Clinically Anxious Children: A Parent-Report Diary Study

    Author(s)
    Price, Therese E
    Farrell, Lara J
    Donovan, Caroline L
    Waters, Allison M
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Farrell, Lara J.
    Waters, Allison M.
    Donovan, Caroline L.
    Price, Therese
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Anxiety disorders and behavioral sleep-related problems (SRPs) frequently co-occur during childhood. However, few studies have used the recommended method of a sleep-diary. The present study examined parental perceptions of behavioral SRPs in anxious compared to non-anxious children using a sleep-diary. Parents of 22 clinically anxious children and 29 healthy controls (aged 6–13 years) completed a 7-day sleep-diary of their child’s behavioral SRPs. Compared to non-anxious peers, anxious children were rated by parents as more often (a) having a negative mood before bed, (b) delaying bed, (c) requiring parental assistance ...
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    Anxiety disorders and behavioral sleep-related problems (SRPs) frequently co-occur during childhood. However, few studies have used the recommended method of a sleep-diary. The present study examined parental perceptions of behavioral SRPs in anxious compared to non-anxious children using a sleep-diary. Parents of 22 clinically anxious children and 29 healthy controls (aged 6–13 years) completed a 7-day sleep-diary of their child’s behavioral SRPs. Compared to non-anxious peers, anxious children were rated by parents as more often (a) having a negative mood before bed, (b) delaying bed, (c) requiring parental assistance during the night, especially on weeknights, (d) having difficulty waking on their own the next morning, (e) falling back to sleep after morning waking, and (f) waking in a negative mood. There were no significant group differences in sleep onset latency or sleep duration, and behavioral SRPs of anxious children did not negatively affect their functioning or that of their parents the next day based on parent report. Parents of anxious children are more likely to perceive their children as engaging in behavioral SRPs compared to parents of non-anxious children.
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    Journal Title
    Child Psychiatry and Human Development
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s10578-019-00878-5
    Subject
    Clinical psychology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/384312
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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