Well known ‘Baby Whisperer’ Jo Ryan from Babybliss, shares her advice on how best to understand your baby’s sleep cycles.
Baby sleep cycles are quite different from yours, starting from the amount of time each of you spend sleeping. As you probably already know, your baby needs much more sleep than you do!
Here’s a guide for a 24 hour period, depending on age:
- Newborns need around 16 hours
- 2 month olds + need around 12
- 3 month olds need around 15 hours
Of course, your baby will not take all this sleep in one long stretch, but in sleep-wake cycles throughout the day. You only need to consider the size of a baby’s stomach (hint: tiny!) to know that they will need to wake more often to fill it up. Babies need to eat quite frequently just to keep functioning.
To properly compare the sleep cycles of adults and babies, let’s start by taking a look at your own sleep cycles. When adults fall asleep, they go through several sleep stages, such as deep sleep and REM (or active) sleep. The latter stage is actually essential for the healthy life of any adult and is known widely because of its association with dreaming. What’s more, even though the skeletal system is temporarily paralysed, brain activity during this stage resembles that of the waking brain – the eyes move quickly beneath the eyelids and breathing often becomes irregular. From beginning to end, an adult’s sleep cycle lasts about 90-100 minutes. At the end of a sleep cycle, an adult either wakes up or begins a new cycle by returning to an earlier stage.
What does a baby’s sleep cycle consist of?
A newborn’s sleep cycle is much simpler with only two stages – quiet and active sleep. Your baby’s sleep cycle is also much shorter, with an average of 50-60 minutes for the first nine months, often even shorter. It looks like this:
- When a baby first falls asleep they go into active sleep, which is very similar to REM sleep for adults. During this stage, babies are also more likely to wake up. A newborn will spend about 50% of his or her sleeping cycles in this stage, as opposed to an adult, with only 20%.
- About halfway through a sleep cycle, the baby falls into quiet sleep, which is characterised by slower, rhythmic breathing, less movement and no eyelid fluttering. Quiet sleep is the end of the sleep cycle, which means that the baby will either wake up or return to active sleep.
From six months onwards, babies develop more stages that resemble adults and gradually replace quiet sleep. The duration of their sleep cycles also lengthen and the time spent in active sleep shortens.
To recap, babies are not born with the sleep-wake cycles your body works with. They are much lighter sleepers than adults, because they spend so much time in active sleep. This is why it can take anywhere from six months to one year of age for a baby to sleep through the night like you do. From about six months, they can sleep for longer stretches, but it can take a while for them to build to a solid, uninterrupted 8-12 hours sleep with no whimpering or wakefulness whatsoever.
Despite all these challenges about the way babies are wired for sleep, sleep remains crucial in the early months and years for brain development, especially forming the vital connections between the brain hemispheres which are important to language, relationships and reasoning. There are lots of ways to help your baby form healthy sleeping habits. A good place to start is by creating and implementing simple bedtime routines.
About 13SICK, National Home Doctor Service:
13SICK, National Home Doctor Service is Australia’s largest network of home visiting doctors. We provide medical care to patients who urgently need a doctor, but their GP is closed. 13SICK bulk bills all patients with a Medicare or GOLD DVA card. Our Doctors are on the road from 6pm weeknights, 12 noon Saturdays, all day Sunday and public holidays. Our Doctors carry starter packs of many common medications, so in many cases, patients can start treatment right away. After each home visit, we send a report to your GP the following day, so they are kept in the loop.
Remember – more GPs trust 13SICK to care for their patients in the after hours. So, if you or your family needs urgent medical care for a non-life threatening condition, stay home and call 13SICK (that’s 13 7425) and save the hospital ED for emergencies.
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