Sleeping in Newborns and Infants
Because the nervous system of newborns is immature, newborns
sleep a great deal, but only for an hour or two at a time, regardless of
whether it is day or night. By 4 to 6 weeks of age, many infants are on a cycle
of waking for 4 hours and sleeping for 4 hours. By 4 to 6 months of age,
infants usually are capable of adopting a day-night sleep schedule. By 1 year
of age, most infants sleep 8 to 9 hours continuously through the night.
However, disturbances in sleep are common and occur at different times during
the first few years ( see Sleep Problems in Children).
Factors that influence sleep patterns vary by age. At 9
months of age and again around 18 months, disturbances in sleep become common
because
Separation anxiety develops.
Children can move independently and control their
environment.
They may take long late-afternoon naps.
They may become overstimulated while playing before bedtime.
Nightmares tend to become more common.
Parents can assist infants to sleep at night by handling and
stimulating the child less in the late evening and keeping the child's room
dark at night, which is important in the development of normal vision. Infants
should be encouraged at an early age to fall asleep on their own and not in a
parent's arms. In this way, they will be able to quiet themselves when they
wake in the middle of the night.
To minimize the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS),
infants should always sleep on their back, rather than on their stomach or in a
side sleep position. This recommendation has helped reduce the incidence of
SIDS in recent years. Also, infants should not sleep with soft pillows, toys,
or heavy blankets, which may block their breathing. Putting an infant to bed
with a pacifier also helps prevent SIDS (breastfed infants should be at least 1
month old or accustomed to breastfeeding before they are given a pacifier).
Co-sleeping
Co-sleeping is when a parent and infant sleep close to one
another so as to be able to see, hear, and/or touch one another. Co-sleeping
arrangements can include
Bed-sharing (the infant sleeps in the same bed as the
parent)
Room-sharing (the infant sleeps in a different bed but in
the same room as the parent)
Bed-sharing between parents and infants is common but
controversial. There are often cultural and personal reasons why parents choose
to bed-share, including convenience for feeding, bonding, believing their own
watchfulness is the only way to keep their infant safe, and believing that
bed-sharing allows them to continue watchfulness even while sleeping. However,
bed-sharing has been associated with an increased risk of SIDS and may result
in injury or death because infants may become suffocated, strangled, or
trapped.
Room-sharing without bed-sharing still allows parents to be
physically close to their infant for ease of feeding and monitoring, is safer
than bed-sharing or solitary sleeping (the infant sleeps in a separate room),
and is associated with a decreased risk of SIDS. For these reasons, doctors
recommend room-sharing without bed-sharing as the preferred sleeping
arrangement for parents and infants in the first few months of life.
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