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Thoughts and affect experienced by parents of preschool- and school-aged children during night-waking interactions.

Graham J ReidAdam T NewtonKatarina N A McKenzieJ Aimée Coulombe
Published in: Journal of family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association (Division 43) (2022)
Measures of parents' cognitions have advanced our understanding of infants' sleep. But, few comparable measures exist for use with parents of preschool- or school-age children. The Parents' night-waking thoughts and affect questionnaire (PNTQ), a self-report measure of parents' thoughts and feelings when their children wake during the night, addresses this need. This scale was evaluated in two community samples of parents ( N = 473). Sample 1 included preschool-age children (2-5-years-old), and Sample 2 included preschool- and school-age children (2-10-years-old). A subsample completed 1-month test-retest reliability for the PNTQ ( n = 201). Parents completed the PNTQ and measures of agreement with night-waking strategies, parenting stress, mental health, and night-waking. The psychometric properties of the PNTQ (i.e., internal consistency, test-retest reliability; content, construct, and convergent validity) were evaluated. A four-factor solution (positive thoughts about limit-setting, positive thoughts about active comforting, concerns about limit-setting, and distress about night-waking) demonstrated adequate fit in Sample 1 (robust CFI = .900; robust RMSEA = .060), which was replicated in Sample 2 (robust CFI = .870; robust RMSEA = .080). Internal consistency (α c = .68-.88) and test-retest reliability ( r = .46-.80) were acceptable across subscales and samples. There was good evidence for convergent validity in both samples-including correlating with parent-reported night-waking behaviour. The PNTQ is a promising measure of thoughts and affect related to night-waking experienced by parents whose children wake during the night. The PNTQ may increase understanding of parents' use of specific night-waking strategies and may account for resistance to employing alternate techniques. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • sleep quality
  • mental health
  • young adults
  • psychometric properties
  • healthcare
  • emergency department
  • depressive symptoms