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Article

Perceived Barriers and Facilitators for Bedtime Routines in Families with Young Children

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Citation

Kitsaras G, Goodwin M, Kelly {P, Pretty {A & Allan J (2021) Perceived Barriers and Facilitators for Bedtime Routines in Families with Young Children. Children, 8 (1). https://doi.org/10.3390/children8010050

Abstract
Objectives; Bedtime routines are a highly recurrent family activity with important health, social and behavioural implications. This study examined perceived barriers to, and facilitators of, formulating, establishing and maintaining optimal bedtime routines in families with young children. Design; Participants completed a semi-structured interview based on the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF). Analysis followed a deductive approach. Participants; A total of parents participated in the study. Most participants (N=30) were females, were white (N=25) and stay at home parents (N=12). Results; Key barriers included lack of appropriate knowledge and sources of information, problematic skills development, social influences, cognitive overload and lack of motivation for change. Facilitators included social role, access to resources, positive intentions, beliefs about consequences and reinforcement. In particular, optimal bedtime routines were less likely to be enacted when parents were tired/fatigued and there was a strong effect of habit, with suboptimal routines maintained over time due to past experiences and a lack of awareness about the importance of a good bedtime routine. Conclusions; Several theory-based, and potentially modifiable, determinants of optimal bedtime routines were identified in this study, providing important information for future interventions. Several of the key determinants identified were transient (tiredness) and/or non-conscious (habit), suggesting that future interventions mayneed to be deployed in real time, and should extend beyond conventional techniques.

Keywords
behavior change; child; sleep; parental; qualitative

Journal
Children: Volume 8, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date14/02/2021
Publication date online15/01/2021
Date accepted by journal13/01/2021
URL
PublisherMDPI
eISSN2227-9067

People (1)

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology

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