‘Children should sleep with parents until they’re five’ by Sian Griffiths

October 21, 2009
Times Online UK
From The Sunday Times
May 14, 2006

Margot Sunderland, director of education at the Centre for Child Mental Health in London, says the practice, known as “co-sleeping”, makes children more likely to grow up as calm, healthy adults.

Sunderland, author of 20 books, outlines her advice in The Science of Parenting, to be published later this month.

She is so sure of the findings in the new book, based on 800 scientific studies, that she is calling for health visitors to be issued with fact sheets to educate parents about co-sleeping.

“These studies should be widely disseminated to parents,” said Sunderland. “I am sympathetic to parenting gurus — why should they know the science? Ninety per cent of it is so new they bloody well need to know it now. There is absolutely no study saying it is good to let your child cry.”

She argues that the practice common in Britain of training children to sleep alone from a few weeks old is harmful because any separation from parents increases the flow of stress hormones such as cortisol.

Her findings are based on advances in scientific understanding over the past 20 years of how children’s brains develop, and on studies using scans to analyse how they react in particular circumstances.

For example, a neurological study three years ago showed that a child separated from a parent experienced similar brain activity to one in physical pain.

Sunderland also believes current practice is based on social attitudes that should be abandoned. “There is a taboo in this country about children sleeping with their parents,” she said.

“What I have done in this book is present the science. Studies from around the world show that co-sleeping until the age of five is an investment for the child. They can have separation anxiety up to the age of five and beyond, which can affect them in later life. This is calmed by co-sleeping.”

Symptoms can also be physical. Sunderland quotes one study that found some 70% of women who had not been comforted when they cried as children developed digestive difficulties as adults.

Sunderland’s book puts her at odds with widely read parenting gurus such as Gina Ford, whose advice is followed by thousands.

Ford advocates establishing sleep routines for babies from a very early age in cots “away from the rest of the house” and teaching babies to sleep “without the assistance of adults”.

In her book The Complete Sleep Guide for Contented Babies and Toddlers she writes that parents need time by themselves: “Bed sharing . . . more often than not ends up with parents sleeping in separate rooms” and exhausted mothers, a situation that “puts enormous pressure on the family as a whole”.

Annette Mountford, chief executive of the parenting organisation Family Links, confirmed that the norm for children in Britain was to be encouraged to sleep in cots and beds, often in separate bedrooms, from an early age. “Parents need their space,” she said. “There are definite benefits from encouraging children into their own sleep routine in their own space.”

Sunderland says moving children to their own beds from a few weeks old, even if they cry in the night, has been shown to increase the flow of cortisol.

Studies of children under five have shown that for more than 90%, cortisol rises when they go to nursery. For 75%, it falls whenever they go home.

Professor Jaak Panksepp, a neuroscientist at Washington State University, who has written a foreword to the book, said Sunderland’s arguments were “a coherent story that is consistent with neuroscience. A wise society will take it to heart”.

Sunderland argues that putting children to sleep alone is a peculiarly western phenomenon that may increase the chance of cot death, also known as sudden infant death syndrome (Sids). This may be because the child misses the calming effect on breathing and heart function of lying next to its mother.

“In the UK, 500 children a year die of Sids,” Sunderland writes. “In China, where it [co-sleeping] is taken for granted, Sids is so rare it does not have a name.”


Crabby Sleeping Position

October 13, 2009

Maybe it is quite a long journey from home to school. Ajib was sleepy and tried to have shut eye for seconds before reaching his school.

Hubby was quite concern as Ajib was usually chatty in the morning. However, it was quite a quiet morning. Ajib’s body was slightly curled and his hands were unmoved.

“Sleeping like a a crab..” Daddy commented. Liya thought it was funny. Me too. We remembered the deep fried crabs we ate last weekend at Bagan Lalang.


Intoxicated

August 27, 2009

I can never give so much love. I have never received so much attention all my life. Having kids, our priorities have changed. Them before ourselves, most of the time.

Liya and Ajib have made me the center of their universe. I must be the last person they see before they go to sleep. And, moi ought to be the first person they see when they open their eyes in the morning. I feel needed…there’s so much love, and I’m intoxicated by love!


Sleep Deprivation

June 18, 2009

Losing sleep and interrupted sleep have been common complaints of new parents. As a result, parents can be quite irritable and exhausted.

Children ought to be sleeping between 9pm – 6am for physical and cognitive growth. The cycle must be completed every single day. This is totally against the 8-10 hour sleep required. Timing is everything to ensure that our little ones are functioning well. By establishing routines, there are less struggles and confrontations during bedtime.


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