ExploreFinding
Finding decline
Mothers who perceived their infant's sleep as a problem had significantly higher concurrent likelihood of bedsharing compared to room-sharing, and this association persisted after adjusting for maternal depressive symptoms and study intervention group.
Effect sizeRRR 1.79
CI95% CI 1.12-2.86
ComparatorMothers who did not perceive an infant sleep problem (room-sharing reference)
Effect summarydecline; RRR 1.79; CI: 95% CI 1.12-2.86
Effect modifiers[{"modifier": "Maternal depressive symptoms", "interaction_p": "not significant", "direction": "null", "stratum_details": "Interaction term between MDS and ISP was tested and was not significant; not included in final models", "plain_language": "Depression did not change the relationship between perceiving a sleep problem and bedsharing", "annotation_notes": ""}]

Connected entities

Outcomes
Populations

Source

PMC8821130
Directionality of the associations between bedsharing, maternal depressive symptoms, and infant sleep during the first 15 months of life
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