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Moe Kitenga: a qualitative study of perceptions of infant and child sleep practices among Māori whānau

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posted on 2020-06-23, 22:03 authored by Molly George, Reremoana Theodore, Rosalina Richards, Barbara Galland, Rachael Taylor, Matt Matahaere, Lisa Te Morenga
Insufficient sleep is a strong risk factor for unhealthy weight gain in children. Māori (the indigenous population of Aotearoa (New Zealand)) children have an increased risk of unhealthy weight gain compared to New Zealand European children. Interventions around sleep could provide an avenue for improving health and limiting excessive weight gain with other meaningful benefits for whānau (extended family) well-being. However, current messages promoting good sleep may not be realistic for many Māori whānau. Using qualitative methods, the Moe Kitenga project explored the diverse realities of sleep in 14 Māori whānau. We conclude that for infant sleep interventions to prevent obesity and improve health outcomes for Māori children, they must take into account the often pressing social circumstances of many Māori whānau that are a barrier to adopting infant sleep recommendations, otherwise sleep interventions could create yet another oppressive standard that whānau fail to live up to.

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Preferred citation

George, M., Theodore, R., Richards, R., Galland, B., Taylor, R., Matahaere, M. & Te Morenga, L. (2020). Moe Kitenga: a qualitative study of perceptions of infant and child sleep practices among Māori whānau. AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples, 16(2), 153-160. https://doi.org/10.1177/1177180120929694

Journal title

AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples

Volume

16

Issue

2

Publication date

2020-06-01

Pagination

153-160

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2020-06-21

ISSN

1177-1801

eISSN

1174-1740

Language

en

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