Studies have shown that infant sleep
training methods known as “controlled comforting” and “camping out” improve
infant sleep and reduce maternal depression in the short term. Some parents and
health professionals want to know whether the benefits of the sleep techniques
are longer lasting. A new study out of Australia, “Five-Year Follow-up of Harms and Benefits of Behavioral Infant Sleep Intervention: Randomized Trial,” in the
October 2012 Pediatrics (published online Sept. 10), followed 225 children from
infancy through age 6 to track whether a behavioral sleep program had
long-lasting effects on children’s mental health, stress levels, the
child-parent relationship, or maternal mental health. Parents who reported sleep
problems in their 7-month-old infant were eligible for the study. Half were
offered a sleep program which involved using positive bedtime routines plus one
of two behavioral techniques: “controlled comforting,” in which parents respond
to their infant’s cry at increasing time intervals to allow the child to
self-settle; and “camping out,” in which parents sit with the child as the child
learns to independently fall asleep, slowly removing their presence from the
child’s room. The improvements to children’s and mothers’ sleep and mothers’
mental health were still evident as late as age 2, then faded by age 6. At this
later age, children who had been offered the sleep program as babies were
similar to the control group in their mental and behavioral health, sleep
quality, stress and relationship with their parents. The same applied to
mothers’ mental health and parenting style. The authors conclude that the sleep
techniques are cost-effective and safe to use. Parents and health professionals
can feel confident using behavioral techniques for managing infant sleep.
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The American Academy of Pediatrics is
an organization of 60,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical
subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists dedicated to the
health, safety and well-being of infants, children, adolescents and
young adults. For more information, visit www.aap.org.