| CHILDREN'S SLEEP PROBLEMS
Many children have sleep problems. Examples include:
- Frequent awakening during the night;
- Talking during sleep;
- Difficulty falling asleep;
- Waking up crying;
- Feeling sleepy during the day;
- Having nightmares;
- Bedwetting.
Many childhood sleep problems are related to irregular
sleep habits or to anxiety about going to bed and falling asleep. Sleep
problems may also be symptoms of emotional difficulties.
"Separation anxiety" is a developmental landmark for young
children. For normal young children, bedtime is a time of separation:
Some children will do all they can to prevent separation.
To help minimize these types of common sleep problems,
a parent can develop consistent and regular sleep routines for children.
Parents often find that feeding and rocking help an
infant to get to sleep. However, as the child leaves infancy, parents
should encourage the child to sleep without feeding and rocking.
Otherwise, the developing child will have a hard time going to sleep
alone.
Nightmares are relatively common. The child remembers
nightmares, which usually involve major threats to the child's
well-being. Nightmares, which being at a variety of ages, affect girls
more often than boys. For some, nightmares are serious and frequent.
Sleep terrors, sleepwalking, and sleep talking
constitute a relatively rare group of sleep disorders, called "parasomnias."
Sleep terrors are different from nightmares. The child
with sleep terrors will scream uncontrollably and appear to be awake,
but is confused and can't communicate. Sleep terrors usually begin
between ages 4 and 12 years.
Children who sleepwalk may appear to be awake as they
move around, but are actually asleep and in danger of hurting
themselves. Sleepwalking usually begins between ages 6 and 12years.
Both sleep terrors and sleepwalking run in families and affect boys more
often than girls.
Most often, children with parasomnias have single or
occasional episodes of these disorders. However, when episodes occur
several times a night, or nightly for weeks at a time, or interfere with
the child's daytime behavior, treatment by a child and adolescent
psychiatrist may be necessary. A range of treatments is available.
Fortunately,
as they mature, children usually get over common sleep problems as well
as the more serious disorders. However, parents with urgent concerns
should contact their pediatrician or directly seek consultation with a
child and adolescent psychiatrist.
Information
provided by:
American Academy of Child/Adolescent Psychiatry
http://www.aacap.org
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