Behavioral Sleep Interventions for Children with Rare Genetic Neurodevelopmental Conditions: A Retrospective Analysis of Overall Outcomes for 26 Cases
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Published:2024-05-07
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
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ISSN:2366-7532
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Container-title:Advances in Neurodevelopmental Disorders
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Adv Neurodev Disord
Author:
Woodford Emma C.ORCID, France Karyn G.ORCID, Blampied Neville M.ORCID, Hanning UrsulaORCID, Swan Catherine E., McLay Laurie K.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Sleep difficulties are highly prevalent among children with rare genetic neurodevelopmental conditions (RGNC) such as Angelman and Smith-Magenis syndromes. Behavioral interventions are commonly used in the treatment of sleep difficulties in children; however, research is limited in children with RGNC. This study evaluated the overall effectiveness and acceptability of function-based behavioral sleep interventions for children with RGNC.
Methods
Data was collated from a series of experimental single-case research studies with 26 children (18 months to 19 years of age) with a range of RGNC, who received a behavioral sleep intervention. Intervention strategies included circadian (e.g., sleep/wake rescheduling), antecedent (e.g., sleep hygiene), and/or consequence (e.g., positive reinforcement of sleep-conducive behavior and modified extinction) modifications implemented by parents. Clinicians provided support for parents mostly via telehealth methods. Overall outcomes were examined using modified Brinley plots and effect size estimates. The effect of age, gender, and a range of psychological variables on intervention response was also examined.
Results
Improvements in sleep problem severity were observed for 24/26 participants, and gains were maintained at long-term follow-up for 13/16. Interestingly, 50% of the children achieved clinically significant change with less restrictive strategies (e.g., circadian, antecedent and positive reinforcement strategies), suggesting extinction procedures may be used as the last option in a sequence of interventions. Parents generally perceived interventions to be acceptable. There was minimal evidence of any differential response to intervention as a function of age, gender, or psychological variables.
Conclusions
Results suggest function-based behavioral interventions offer an effective and socially valid method for treating sleep disturbance in children with RGNC.
Funder
University of Canterbury
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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