Publication:
Troubled sleep: Night waking, breastfeeding and parent–offspring conflict

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2014

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Oxford University Press
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Haig, David. 2014. “Troubled sleep: Night waking, breastfeeding and parent–offspring conflict.” Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health 2014 (1): 32-39. doi:10.1093/emph/eou005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/emph/eou005.

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Abstract

Disrupted sleep is probably the most common complaint of parents with a new baby. Night waking increases in the second half of the first year of infant life and is more pronounced for breastfed infants. Sleep-related phenotypes of infants with Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes suggest that imprinted genes of paternal origin promote greater wakefulness whereas imprinted genes of maternal origin favor more consolidated sleep. All these observations are consistent with a hypothesis that waking at night to suckle is an adaptation of infants to extend their mothers’ lactational amenorrhea, thus delaying the birth of a younger sib and enhancing infant survival.

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lactational amenorrhea, interbirth intervals, night waking, breastfeeding, co-sleeping, evolutionary pediatrics

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