Racial/Ethnic and Socio-Contextual Correlates of Chronic Sleep Curtailment in Childhood

Sleep. 2016 Sep 1;39(9):1653-61. doi: 10.5665/sleep.6086.

Abstract

Study objectives: To examine the association between race/ethnicity and sleep curtailment from infancy to mid-childhood, and to determine the extent to which socioeconomic and contextual factors both explain racial/ethnic differences and are independently associated with sleep curtailment.

Methods: We studied 1,288 children longitudinally in Project Viva, a pre-birth cohort study, from 6 months to 7 years of age. The main exposure was the child's race/ethnicity. The main outcome was a sleep curtailment score from 6 months to 7 years. The score ranged from 0-13, where 0 indicated maximal sleep curtailment and 13 indicated never having curtailed sleep.

Results: The mean (standard deviation) sleep curtailment score was 10.2 (2.7) points. In adjusted models (β [95% CI]), black (-1.92, [-2.39, -1.45] points), Hispanic (-1.58, [-2.43, -0.72] points), and Asian (-1.71, [-2.55, -0.86] points) children had lower sleep scores than white children. Adjustment for sociodemographic covariates attenuated racial/ethnic differences in sleep scores for black (by 24%) and Hispanic children (by 32%) but strengthened the differences for Asian children by 14%. Further adjustment for environmental and behavioral variables did not substantially change these differences. Independently, low maternal education, living in households with incomes < $70,000, viewing more TV, and having a TV in the child's bedroom were associated with lower sleep scores.

Conclusions: Chronic sleep curtailment from infancy to mid-childhood was more prevalent among black, Hispanic, and Asian children. These differences were partially but not entirely explained by socio-contextual variables. Independently, children from lower socioeconomic status and those with greater exposures to TV also had greater sleep curtailment.

Keywords: ethnicity; health disparities; race; sleep curtailment; socioeconomic status.

MeSH terms

  • Asian
  • Black or African American
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Chronic Disease
  • Ethnicity*
  • Female
  • Health Status Disparities*
  • Hispanic or Latino
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Male
  • Massachusetts / epidemiology
  • Prevalence
  • Prospective Studies
  • Risk Factors
  • Sleep Deprivation / economics
  • Sleep Deprivation / ethnology
  • Sleep Deprivation / etiology*
  • Social Class*
  • White People