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Preventing early infant sleep and crying problems and postnatal depression: a randomized trial

journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by H Hiscock, F Cook, J Bayer, Ha LeHa Le, F Mensah, W Cann, B Symon, I St James-Roberts
<b>Objective<br></b> To evaluate a prevention program for infant sleep and cry problems and postnatal depression.<br><br><b>Methods<br></b> Randomized controlled trial with 781 infants born at 32 weeks or later in 42 well-child centers, Melbourne, Australia. Follow-up occurred at infant age 4 and 6 months. The intervention including supplying information about normal infant sleep and cry patterns, settling techniques, medical causes of crying and parent self-care, delivered via booklet and DVD (at infant age 4 weeks), telephone consultation (8 weeks), and parent group (13 weeks) versus well-child care. Outcomes included caregiver-reported infant night sleep problem (primary outcome), infant daytime sleep, cry and feeding problems, crying and sleep duration, caregiver depression symptoms, attendance at night wakings, and formula changes.<br><br><b>Results<br></b> Infant outcomes were similar between groups. Relative to control caregivers, intervention caregivers at 6 months were less likely to score >9 on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (7.9%, vs 12.9%, adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.57, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.34 to 0.94), spend >20 minutes attending infant wakings (41% vs 51%, adjusted OR 0.66, 95% CI 0.46 to 0.95), or change formula (13% vs 23%, P < .05). Infant frequent feeders (>11 feeds/24 hours) in the intervention group were less likely to have daytime sleep (OR 0.13, 95% CI 0.03 to 0.54) or cry problems (OR 0.27, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.86) at 4 months.<br><br><b>Conclusions<br></b> An education program reduces postnatal depression symptoms, as well as sleep and cry problems in infants who are frequent feeders. The program may be best targeted to frequent feeders.<br>

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Location

Elk Grove Village, Ill.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Pediatrics

Volume

133

ISSN

0031-4005

eISSN

1098-4275

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