INFAD (Jun 2020)

Protective and risk factors of toddlers' sleep and parental stress

  • Simona de Stasio,
  • Benedetta Ragni,
  • Francesca Boldrini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17060/ijodaep.2020.n1.v2.1870
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 505 – 514

Abstract

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The current study examined the network of relationships among toddlers’ quality of sleep and emotion regulation, parental bedtime practices and involvement, parental self-perceived social support and stress, integrating a novel combination of psychosocial dimensions into a predictive model of quality of sleep and parental stress in a sample of 80 families with 2–3-year-old children. The results indicated that infants’ emotion regulation, as well as proximal context variables, considering both maternal and paternal psychosocial functioning predicted variance in parental levels of stress. Furthermore, the findings showed that the number of child’s night awakenings reported by mothersand thetimerequested bytoddlersto fallasleep, were significantly related to parental distress levels as referred by both parents.

Keywords