City
Epaper

Moms facing mild to high levels of Covid-19 anxiety, insomnia: Study

By IANS | Updated: October 12, 2020 15:34 IST

Jerusalem, Oct 12 In a major study, researchers have found that many mothers are experiencing an increase in insomnia ...

Open in App

Jerusalem, Oct 12 In a major study, researchers have found that many mothers are experiencing an increase in insomnia severity and mild-to-high levels of acute Covid-19 anxiety and insomnia.

"In the study, we addressed consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic and home confinement on maternal anxiety, insomnia, as well as reports of sleep problems among children," said study author Liat Tikotzky from Ben-Gurion University in Israel.

The results, published in the Journal of Sleep Research, indicated that maternal clinical insomnia during Covid-19 more than doubled to 23 per cent during the pandemic, compared with only 11 per cent before the pandemic.

Approximately 80 per cent of mothers also reported mild to high levels of current Covid-19 anxiety.

In the study, mothers were asked to complete a self-reporting questionnaire with reference to two time points: (a) retrospectively one to two months before the Covid-19 outbreak in Israel, and (b) during home confinement.

The researchers then computed a score representing the mother's perception of change in her sleep quality.

"We further observed that mothers who reported an increase in insomnia symptoms had significantly higher levels of acute Covid-19 anxiety than mothers who reported no change in insomnia symptoms," the authors wrote.

Moreover, the researchers found that about 30 per cent of mothers reported a negative change in their child's sleep quality and a decrease in sleep duration.

However, it is important to note that the majority of mothers reported no change in their child's sleep quality, duration, arrangement, and their perception of child's sleep as problematic, the researchers said.

Moreover, 12 per cent of mothers even reported a positive change in their child's sleep quality, and 25 per cent reported an increase in sleep duration.

Finally, the researchers observed that mothers who reported higher scores of insomnia were also more likely to report that their children had poorer sleep quality and shorter sleep duration.

This is consistent with previous studies demonstrating significant links between maternal and child sleep quality during normal times.

The findings emphasize the importance of further exploring familial resiliency factors that may explain the different patterns of responses in children's and mothers' sleep during times of crises.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Ben-gurion universityJournal of sleep researchLiat tikotzkyisraeljerusalem
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIstanbul Shooting: 1 Attacker Dead, Police Officer Injured Amid Chaos near Israeli Consulate

InternationalUS Drops Bunker-Buster Bombs on Iranian Ammunition Depot in Isfahan; Trump Shares Video

NationalUS-Israel-Iran War: Ships Carrying 94,000 Metric Tonnes of LPG Safely Cross Strait of Hormuz, Head Towards India

NationalIndia Plays Crucial Role in Ending War, Says Israel; Sets 4 Conditions for Iran

InternationalIsraeli Air Force Claims Strike in Beirut Killed Hezbollah Operative

Health Realted Stories

HealthJharkhand HC seeks detailed probe report on HIV-infected blood transfusion in Chaibasa

HealthTejashwi Yadav targets Health Minister Mangal Pandey over viral Gaya hospital video

Health‘Poshan Pakhwada 2026’ to focus on maximising brain development in 1st 6 years of life

HealthTurmeric Milk Benefits: Know When to Drink It for Best Results

HealthWhat Is Second-Hand Stress? How Others’ Anxiety Can Affect Your Mental Health