Priorities for Pediatric Sleep Medicine
Attendees at the Amelia Island conference on pediatric sleep medicine sponsored by Brown Medical School sought to define priorities for research, patient care, policy, and education in their field. Achieving consensus on a developmental nosology of insomnia is a key first step, according to Thomas Anders, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at the University of California, Davis, School of Medicine. Current standards, he said, do not deal with issues of duration and severity crucial in assessment of children.
Larger epidemiologic studies and larger developmental/longitudinal studies, he said, will provide a clearer picture of the magnitude of children's sleep problems. Researchers and clinicians need better ways to measure and determine the effects of daytime sleepiness and better understanding of neuroimaging and molecular mechanisms. Clinicians need to promote early, developmentally appropriate and culturally sensitive sleep hygiene. Professionals, parents, and children all need more information about sleep.
Nationwide educational efforts aim to encourage even young children to practice good sleep habits. These include the National Center on Sleep Disorders Research's Star Sleeper program, which uses the comic-strip figure Garfield as its “spokescat,” at<www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/public/sleep/starslp>, and the National Sleep Foundation's Time to Sleep with P.J. Bear at<www.sleepforkids.org/html/pjbear.html>.