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Research Article

Sleep Habits of Early School-Aged Children with Type 1 Diabetes and Their Parents: Family Characteristics and Diabetes Management

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Pages 649-658 | Published online: 24 Sep 2021
 

ABSTRACT

Study Objectives

School-aged children with type 1 diabetes (T1D) and their parents are at risk for sleep disturbances, yet few studies have used objective measures to assess sleep characteristics in young children with T1D.

Methods

Forty children (ages 5–9) with T1D and their parents wore actigraph watches and completed sleep diaries for 7 nights. Parents also completed questionnaires about demographic information, diabetes distress, fear of hypoglycemia, and family routines. Children’s clinical data (HbA1c and blood glucose data) were extracted from the medical record.

Results

Most of the children and their parents obtained insufficient sleep. Based on actigraphy data, children slept an average of 7.9 hours/night and parents slept 6.7 hours/night, below the recommendations of 9–11 and 7–9 hours of sleep, respectively. Shorter child sleep latency was significantly associated with better glycemic levels, and parents’ sleep duration and efficiency were related to child’s glycemic levels. Parental fear of hypoglycemia and lack of family routines were associated with poorer sleep quality in parents and children, and with parental diabetes distress.

Conclusions

Sleep duration and quality is a modifiable target for potentially improving glycemic levels and parental distress in early school-aged children with T1D.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 Due to contracting issues, we switched to a different brand of actigraph watch after starting enrollment, and no significant differences in parent or child sleep parameters were observed related to device brand.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust [2016PG-T1D053].

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