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Geocultural differences in preschooler sleep profiles and family practices: An analysis of pooled data from 37 countries

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posted on 2025-05-15, 00:29 authored by Z Zhang, C Abdeta, MS Chelly, J Del Pozo-Cruz, CE Draper, E Engberg, A Florindo, L Germana, F Ghofranipour, H Guan, ASC Ha, A El Hamdouchi, HK Tang, MS Hossain, B Jambaldorj, DH Kim, D Koh, A Kontsevaya, M Löf, H Lubree, A Jáuregui, N Munambah, T Mwase-Vuma, A Oluwayomi, BN Pham, JJ Reilly, AE Staiano, A Suherman, C Tanaka, S Tanui, Wei-Peng TeoWei-Peng Teo, MS Tremblay, A Turab, E Užičanin, SLC Veldman, EK Webster, VP Wickramasinghe, DA Widyastari, A Okely
Abstract Study Objectives To examine (1) multidimensional sleep profiles in preschoolers (3–6 years) across geocultural regions and (2) differences in sleep characteristics and family practices between Majority World regions (Pacific Islands, Sub-Saharan Africa, Eastern Europe, Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America) and the Minority World (the Western world). Methods Participants were 3507 preschoolers from 37 countries. Nighttime sleep characteristics and nap duration (accelerometer: n = 1950) and family practices (parental questionnaire) were measured. Mixed models were used to estimate the marginal means of sleep characteristics by region and examine the differences. Results Geocultural region explained up to 30% of variance in sleep characteristics. A pattern of short nighttime sleep duration, low sleep efficiency, and long nap duration was observed in Eastern Europe, Northeast Asia, and Southeast Asia. The second pattern, with later sleep midpoints and greater night-to-night sleep variability, was observed in South Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Latin America. Compared to the Minority World, less optimal sleep characteristics were observed in several Majority World regions, with medium-to-large effect sizes (∣d∣=0.48–2.35). Several Majority World regions reported more frequent parental smartphone use during bedtime routines (Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia: 0.77–0.99 units) and were more likely to have electronic devices in children’s bedroom (Eastern Europe, Latin America, South Asia: OR = 5.97–16.57) and co-sleeping arrangement (Asia, Latin America: OR = 7.05–49.86), compared to the Minority World. Conclusions Preschoolers’ sleep profiles and related family practices vary across geocultural regions, which should be considered in sleep health promotion initiatives and policies.

History

Journal

Sleep

Volume

48

Article number

zsae305

Pagination

1-12

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0161-8105

eISSN

1550-9109

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)