Many children do not meet the recommendations for healthy sleep, which is concerning given the potential negative effects on children's health. To promote healthy sleep, it is crucial to understand its determinants. This concept mapping study therefore explores perspectives of children and parents on potential determinants of children's inadequate sleep. The focus lies on 9-12 year old children (n = 45), and their parents (n = 33), from low socioeconomic neighbourhoods, as these children run a higher risk of living in a sleep-disturbing environment (e.g., worries, noise). All participants generated potential reasons (i.e., ideas) for children's inadequate sleep. Next, participants sorted all ideas by relatedness and rated their importance. Subsequently, multidimensional scaling and hierarchical cluster analyses were performed to create clusters of ideas for children and parents separately. Children and parents both identified psychological (i.e., fear, affective state, stressful situation), social environmental (i.e., sleep schedule, family sleep habits), behavioural (i.e., screen behaviour, physical activity, diet), physical environmental (i.e., sleep environment such as temperature, noise, light), and physiological (i.e., physical well-being) determinants. These insights may be valuable for the development of future healthy sleep interventions.Knowledge of the most relevant determinants is essential for the development of effective interventions [15]. A recent review of prospective studies [16] found evidence that spending more time on screens (e.g., TV, computer, games), having a difficult temperament, and past poor or inadequate sleep health (i.e., sleep quality or quantity) were longitudinally associated with shorter sleep duration. Another review summarized empirical evidence related to common paediatric sleep recommendations and identified having an inappropriate bedtime, not having a relaxing bedtime routine, having an irregular sleep schedule, a negative emotional environment (e.g., family stress, family conflict), and poorer emotional well-being (e.g., higher levels of internalizing symptoms) as potential determinants of children's inadequate sleep [17]. However, the perspectives of children and their parents are lacking in the current literature.The perspectives of children and their parents could bring about new and important insights into potential determinants of inadequate sleep, which can subsequently inform intervention development. Consequently, the aim of this study is to explore the perspectives of children and parents living in low-SEP neighbourhoods on potential determinants of children's inadequate sleep health.
Materials and MethodsA participatory mixed-methods concept mapping study was conducted to assess children's and parents' perspectives on potential determinants of children's inadequate sleep health [18]. For the qualitative part of this approach, participants generated ideas about potential determinants during group brainstorm sessions, and subsequently rated these ideas according t...