Sleep Medicine: X (Dec 2019)

Emergence of racial/ethnic differences in infant sleep duration in the first six months of life

  • Tayla Ash,
  • Kirsten K. Davison,
  • Sebastien Haneuse,
  • Christine Horan,
  • Nicole Kitos,
  • Susan Redline,
  • Elsie M. Taveras

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
p. 100003

Abstract

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Objective: Examine the emergence of differences in sleep duration between infants from different racial/ethnic backgrounds and extent to which differences are explained by socioeconomic status (SES) and sleep continuity. Methods: Sleep duration and continuity (number of night wakings and longest nighttime stretch of sleep) were assessed for 394 infants in the Rise & Sleep Health in Infancy & Early Childhood (SHINE) birth cohort at one- and six-months using the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire (BISQ). Multivariable regression was used to estimate associations of race/ethnicity with sleep duration adjusting for individual-level covariates, SES, and sleep continuity. Results: The sample was 40% non-Hispanic white, 33% Hispanic, 11% Black, and 15% Asian. Mean (SD) durations for daytime, nighttime, and total sleep at one-month were 6.3 (2.0), 8.9 (1.5), and 15.2 (2.7) hours, respectively. Corresponding durations at six-months were 3.0 (1.4), 9.9 (1.3), and 13.0 (1.9) hours. At one-month, Hispanic infants had shorter nighttime sleep than white infants [β: −0.44 h (95% CI: −0.80, −0.08)]. At six-months, Hispanic [β: −0.96 h (−1.28, −0.63)] and Black [β: −0.60 h (−1.07, −0.12)] infants had shorter nighttime sleep than white infants. The near 1-h differential in night sleep among Hispanics resulted in shorter total sleep [β: −0.66 h (−1.16, −0.15)]. Associations across all racial/ethnic groups were attenuated after adjustment for SES at one- and six months. Sleep continuity attenuated associations with nighttime and total sleep duration by 20–60% for Hispanic infants at six-months. Conclusions: Differences in sleep duration emerge early in life among racial/ethnic groups and are in part explained by SES and sleep continuity.

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