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Parent interviews

dataset
posted on 2023-05-17, 01:34 authored by Hayley Etherton, Yvonne Hauck
Problematic infant sleep is a common issue facing parents and can have deleterious effects on many aspects of health and wellbeing for the child, parents and broader family unit. Extinction-based interventions are the most common treatment recommended for problematic child sleep behaviours, and involve ignoring a crying child to various degrees. Multiple sources have described parental resistance to implementing such methods but little is known about their uptake in the community. This resistance potentially leaves parents without support or treatment for sleep problems. This project explored (1) Australian parents’ use of three common, extinction-based sleep interventions (unmodified extinction, graduated extinction, and extinction with parent presence) and (2) views on managing sleep with their young child. An exploratory, mixed methods approach was used to meet the project objectives. To capture parents’ broader perspectives on child sleep, a qualitative descriptive design was employed. Forty mothers from metropolitan (n = 3) and regional areas (n = 5) of three Australian states contributed their reflections within semi-structured, individual and group interviews. Thematic analysis identified three primary themes with additional sub-themes and dimensions.

History

Start Date

2014-03-24

Finish Date

2014-09-04

Language

English

Open Access

  • No

Author Research Institute

  • Appleton Institute

Medium

Data are stored in M4A audio file, Word, and PDF formats.

Number and size of Dataset

75 files, 5 folders: 300MB

Supervisor

Professor Sarah Blunden

Geolocation

Adelaide, Mount Gambier, Perth, Albany, Geraldton, Brisbane, Mackay, Rockhampton