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Desperate for Sleep: Exploring Parental Perceptions of Melatonin Use Among Adolescents With Neurodevelopmental Disorders.

Journal for specialists in pediatric nursing : JSPN2025

Hanish Alyson E, Freudenburg Shelby M, Klein Abbey J, Stappert Danielle J, Shade Marcia Y

What this study means for families

This study interviewed 26 parents of teenagers with autism and/or ADHD about their experiences with melatonin for sleep problems. All children had trouble falling asleep before using melatonin, affecting behavior and family life. Parents tried other sleep strategies first, then started melatonin usually on their doctor's advice. All parents found melatonin helpful and considered it safe and natural.

However, many switched between different melatonin brands and doses, which may affect how well it works.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Research summary

This qualitative study explored parental perspectives on melatonin use for sleep disturbances in adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and/or ADHD. Semi-structured interviews with 26 parents revealed universal sleep initiation difficulties before melatonin use, with significant impacts on both child behavior and family functioning. Most parents tried sleep hygiene interventions first, and over half initiated melatonin following healthcare provider recommendations. All parents viewed melatonin as natural and safe, reporting subjective improvements in sleep onset time.

However, parents frequently switched brands and dosages, raising concerns about inconsistent over-the-counter formulations. The study highlights the need for standardized melatonin products and long-term safety research for adolescent populations with neurodevelopmental disorders.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Key findings

  • 1

    All parents reported their adolescents had difficulties falling asleep before melatonin initiation

    Confidence: highRelevance: Confirms sleep onset difficulties as universal concern in this population
  • 2

    All parents reported subjective improvements in sleep latency with exogenous melatonin use

    Confidence: moderateRelevance: Supports melatonin efficacy from parent perspective, though subjective measures only
  • 3

    Parents frequently switched melatonin brands and changed dosages

    Confidence: highRelevance: Highlights variability in over-the-counter formulations and potential impact on efficacy
  • 4

    All parents viewed melatonin as natural without major health or safety concerns

    Confidence: highRelevance: Indicates positive parental attitudes toward melatonin safety

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Clinical implications

Results support parental satisfaction with melatonin for adolescent sleep difficulties in ASD/ADHD. However, frequent brand switching raises quality control concerns. Clinicians should provide education about consistent formulations and monitor usage patterns. Need for standardized melatonin products and objective sleep outcome studies in adolescents with neurodevelopmental disorders.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Limitations

Small qualitative sample (26 parents) limits generalizability. Relies solely on subjective parental reports without objective sleep measures or clinical outcomes. No control group or comparison with other interventions. Study focuses only on parental perspectives, not adolescent experiences or healthcare provider views.

Summary by AutismInsights from published abstract. This is not a substitute for reading the original paper.

Original abstract

Sleep disturbances are common in adolescents diagnosed with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs), such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and/or attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Sleep-related impairment can include worsening of underlying symptoms such as stereotypic and repetitive behavior, inattention, hyperactivity, and impaired learning. Exogenous melatonin has shown promise in improving sleep onset latency and total sleep time in adolescents with NDDs. The purpose of this study was to describe parents' experiences with sleep disturbance, sleep-related impairment, and exogenous melatonin use in their adolescent child diagnosed with an NDD.

We conducted semi-structured interviews with twenty-six parents of adolescents (11-18 years of age) diagnosed with ASD and/or ADHD. Data were analyzed using qualitative conventional content analysis. Before the initiation of melatonin, all parents stated their child had experienced difficulties falling asleep. Parents described sleep-related impairments in both child and family functioning, such as behavioral issues, cognitive difficulty, and parental lack of sleep.

Most parents had attempted sleep hygiene-related interventions before initiating melatonin. Over half of the parents reported initiating melatonin at their healthcare provider's recommendation. All parents believed melatonin was natural, without major health or safety issues. All parents described subjective improvements in their child's sleep latency with the use of exogenous melatonin.

Parents of adolescents diagnosed with ASD and/or ADHD reported that melatonin is a safe and effective intervention for the management of their child's sleep disturbances. Parents also reported switching melatonin brands, changing melatonin dosages, and discontinuing and restarting melatonin. Due to the known reported inconsistencies in purity and dosage between over-the-counter melatonin brands, frequent switching of brands and dosages should be a consideration for patient education and the potential impact of efficacy and safety. Practice would benefit from future studies targeting validation and standardization of age-appropriate adolescent sleep-related intervention, including the everyday usage and long-term safety of exogenous melatonin.

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Evidence Grade

Emerging

limited

Grade assigned by AutismInsights based on study type and published abstract.

Study Details

Journal
Journal for specialists in pediatric nursing : JSPN
Year
2025
PMID
41175057
DOI
10.1111/jspn.70010

MeSH Terms

HumansMelatoninAdolescentMaleFemaleParentsChildSleep Wake DisordersNeurodevelopmental DisordersAutism Spectrum DisorderAttention Deficit Disorder with HyperactivityQualitative ResearchAdult