Things You'll Need:
- A sleepless child
- A motivated parent
- A good pediatric sleep disorder specialist who is willing to listen.
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Step 1
Sleep disorders in children can present in very different ways, and because the field of sleep medicine is a very new one, many of these children will never be properly diagnosed and treated. Here is how to avoid that when your child presents with problems falling asleep and staying asleep.
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Step 2
If you have a child who fights bedtime or wakes repeatedly at night, past the time when feedings require it, then tell your pediatrician. Any child should be able to sleep more than 6 hours at night, past the age of 8 months, as long as no other medical problems are present.
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Step 3
Assess your child for breathing problems - by far, the most common cause of sleep disorders. Do they breathe noisily at night? Do they breathe with their mouth open? Do they drool when asleep? Do they wake up needing something to drink because they have dry mouth? Are they restless sleepers who kick the covers off?
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Step 4
Yes, you can train your child to be more comfortable sleeping with you, but a tired child who sleeps normally will not be able to stay up all night just to be with you. Normal children will fall asleep, whereas children suffering from insomnia due to a sleep disorder will spend all their effort waking you to spend time with them. If they can't sleep, you can't either.
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Step 5
Children with difficulty breathing, even mild difficulty, won't be able to sleep normally. If your child has allergies, mouth breathes, has a history of being born premature, or has any other medical diagnosis that leads to difficult breathing, then their bad sleep "habits" may be signs of a sleep disorder. Take them to your pediatrician and demand an evaluation. It's estimated that over 90% of sleep disorders go undiagnosed and untreated. Do let this happen to you. Demand to see a pediatric sleep specialist.











Comments
jamiekucharski said
on 7/14/2009 This is a great article that explains how to differentiate occasional sleeplessness with an infant sleep disorder. Thanks for the clear and well-written article. :)
tachic said
on 7/13/2009 Good tips to know if your baby has a sleeping disorder.