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Why Your Child Can't Sleep — And Why Anxiety Is Usually the Answer

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Anxiety and Poor Sleep Trap Each Other in a Loop That Gets Worse Each Night

    • Anxious children take longer to fall asleep and wake more often at night
    • Poor sleep makes the brain more reactive to threats the next day
    • Over time, the loop compounds and each night becomes harder
  2. 2. The Real Problem Isn't Bedtime — It's What's Happening in Your Child's Mind

    • Pre-sleep worry and racing thoughts are the main driver of sleep difficulty
    • An anxious child's brain can't "let go" enough to fall asleep
    • This is a physiological state, not a choice or a behavior problem
  3. 3. Small, Specific Changes at Bedtime Can Break the Cycle

    • A scheduled "worry time" before bed can reduce racing thoughts at lights-out
    • Writing worries down helps a child's brain let go of them
    • Treating anxiety directly improves sleep, often without a separate sleep program
References & Sources (15)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Alfano, C.A., Zakem, A.H., Costa, N.M., Taylor, L.K., & Weems, C.F. (2009). Sleep Problems and Their Relation to Cognitive Factors, Anxiety, and Depressive Symptoms in Children and Adolescents. Depression and Anxiety, 26(6), 503-512.

    What we learned: Established that anxious cognitions at bedtime mediate the relationship between trait anxiety and sleep disruption in youth, identifying the cognitive pathway as the primary mechanism.

  2. Alfano, C.A., Reynolds, K., Scott, N., Dahl, R.E., & Mellman, T.A. (2013). Polysomnographic Sleep Patterns of Non-depressed, Non-medicated Children with Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Journal of Affective Disorders, 147(1-3), 379-384.

    What we learned: Provided direct polysomnographic evidence that children with GAD show reduced slow-wave sleep and increased sleep-onset latency independent of depression, medication, or sleep hygiene.

  3. Blake, M.J., Sheeber, L.B., Youssef, G.J., Raniti, M.B., & Allen, N.B. (2017). Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Adolescent Cognitive-Behavioral Sleep Interventions. Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review, 20(3), 227-249.

    What we learned: Meta-analysis confirming that multi-component CBT-based sleep interventions produce moderate-to-large effects in youth, with combined cognitive and behavioral approaches outperforming single strategies.

  4. Clementi, M.A. & Alfano, C.A. (2014). Targeted Behavioral Therapy for Childhood Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A Time-Series Analysis of Changes in Anxiety and Sleep. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 28(2), 215-222.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that sleep improvements tracked anxiety improvements closely during CBT, confirming that treating the anxiety mechanistically addresses the sleep disruption.

  5. Dahl, R.E. (1996). The Regulation of Sleep and Arousal: Development and Psychopathology. Development and Psychopathology, 8(1), 3-27.

    What we learned: Seminal paper establishing that sleep requires volitional release of waking vigilance, which is fundamentally incompatible with the hypervigilance state of anxiety -- the core conceptual framework for this article.

  6. Gregory, A.M., Willis, T.A., Wiggs, L., Harvey, A.G., & the STEPS team (2008). Presleep Arousal and Sleep Disturbances in Children. Sleep, 31(12), 1745-1747.

    What we learned: Developed and validated a child-specific pre-sleep arousal measure showing that cognitive arousal (worry, racing thoughts) is a stronger predictor of sleep problems than somatic arousal.

  7. Gregory, A.M. & Sadeh, A. (2012). Sleep, Emotional and Behavioral Difficulties in Children and Adolescents. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 16(2), 129-136.

    What we learned: Comprehensive review establishing the bidirectional relationship: sleep problems at age four predict anxiety at age six, and anxiety predicts later sleep disturbance, compounding over development.

  8. Harvey, A.G. (2002). A Cognitive Model of Insomnia. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 40(8), 869-893.

    What we learned: Foundational cognitive model identifying excessive pre-sleep cognitive activity as both precipitating and maintaining factor in insomnia, directly informing the 'worry time' scheduling intervention.

  9. Hudson, J.L., Gradisar, M., Gamble, A., Schniering, C.A., & Rebelo, I. (2009). The Sleep Patterns and Problems of Clinically Anxious Children. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 47(4), 339-344.

    What we learned: Found that 88% of clinically anxious children reported significant sleep problems, with severity proportional to anxiety severity rather than bedtime routine quality.

  10. Ivanenko, A., Crabtree, V.M., & Gozal, D. (2006). Sleep and Depression in Children and Adolescents. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 10(1), 45-57.

    What we learned: Reviewed evidence on sleep and mood disorders in children and adolescents, finding that unlike in adults, sleep studies have not found consistent changes in sleep architecture paralleling major depression.

  11. Mindell, J.A., Kuhn, B., Lewin, D.S., Meltzer, L.J., & Sadeh, A. (2006). Behavioral Treatment of Bedtime Problems and Night Wakings in Infants and Young Children. Sleep, 29(10), 1263-1276.

    What we learned: Established that graduated exposure approaches for independent sleep produce less distress than extinction-based methods, particularly relevant for anxiety-driven presentations.

  12. Paine, S. & Gradisar, M. (2011). A Randomised Controlled Trial of Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy for Behavioural Insomnia of Childhood in School-Aged Children. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 49(6-7), 379-388.

    What we learned: Demonstrated large effect sizes (d = 0.8-1.2) for adapted CBT-I in school-age children, using a multi-component protocol of stimulus control, sleep restriction, cognitive restructuring, and relaxation.

  13. Palmer, C.A. & Alfano, C.A. (2017). Sleep and Emotion Regulation: An Organizing, Integrative Review. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 31, 6-16.

    What we learned: Integrative review confirming that poor sleep consistently impairs emotion regulation across age groups, with children showing particular vulnerability due to still-developing prefrontal systems.

  14. Schlarb, A.A., Bihlmaier, I., Velten-Schurian, K., Poets, C.F., & Hautzinger, M. (2016). Short- and Long-Term Effects of CBT-I in Groups for School-Age Children Suffering from Chronic Insomnia: The KiSS Program. Behavioral Sleep Medicine, 16(5), 380-397.

    What we learned: The KiSS program for ages 5-10 incorporated age-appropriate externalization tools and graduated exposure, producing significant improvements in sleep-onset latency and night wakings.

  15. Yoo, S.S., Gujar, N., Hu, P., Joiner, F.A., & Walker, M.P. (2007). The Human Emotional Brain Without Sleep: A Prefrontal Amygdala Disconnect. Current Biology, 17(20), R877-R878.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that sleep deprivation amplifies amygdala reactivity by approximately 60% while reducing prefrontal-amygdala connectivity, the foundational neurobiological model for the sleep-anxiety amplification loop.

Anxiety and Poor Sleep Trap Each Other in a Loop That Gets Worse Each Night

When researchers studied children with anxiety, they found that 88% reported at least one significant sleep problem. The most common was difficulty falling asleep, not because of a bad routine, but because of worry. A study tracking children's sleep patterns and anxiety found that the relationship runs both ways: sleep problems at age four predicted anxiety symptoms at age six, and anxiety symptoms predicted later sleep problems. It isn't one thing causing the other. They're locked in a cycle, each one making the other worse.

The mechanism behind this loop is becoming clearer. When a child lies in bed worrying, their body's stress system stays active. Cortisol stays elevated. Heart rate doesn't settle. The brain remains in a state that's incompatible with the relaxation sleep requires. Then, after a night of fragmented or shallow sleep, the brain's emotion-regulation systems don't fully recharge. Research on sleep deprivation shows that losing even modest amounts of sleep increases the brain's reactivity to perceived threats while reducing the prefrontal cortex's ability to calm that reaction down. The child wakes up with less capacity to manage worry, which means more worry at the next bedtime.

This isn't the same as a child who simply doesn't want to go to bed. Not every sleep struggle is anxiety-driven. Some children have behavioral insomnia, where the issue is more about learned associations or inconsistent boundaries. But when the pattern involves worry, racing thoughts, or fear at bedtime, and the child also seems more anxious during the day, the loop is likely in play. Recognizing this distinction matters because the strategies that help are different, and catching the pattern early gives you a real advantage.

The Real Problem Isn't Bedtime — It's What's Happening in Your Child's Mind

Researchers developed a way to measure what children experience in the minutes before sleep. What they found was that cognitive arousal, the racing thoughts, the replaying of the day, the worry about tomorrow, was a stronger predictor of sleep problems than any physical sensation. It wasn't that the child's body was too restless. It was that their mind wouldn't quiet down. A child lying in bed running through every possible bad outcome for the next school day is experiencing something their nervous system treats as a real threat. The alarm system is on, and sleep requires turning it off.

A sleep researcher named Ronald Dahl described this as the fundamental conflict: sleep demands a "letting go" of vigilance, but anxiety is a state of heightened vigilance. The two are biologically opposed. When a child's threat-monitoring system is active, their brain won't allow the shift into sleep. This isn't a discipline problem. It isn't the child being difficult. Their brain is doing exactly what it's designed to do when it detects danger, which is stay alert. The problem is that the danger isn't real, but the brain's response is. Understanding this changes how you think about those long, frustrating bedtimes. Your child isn't refusing to sleep. They can't.

This distinction between anxiety-driven sleeplessness and behavioral sleep issues matters for what you do about it. A child whose main issue is needing a parent present to fall asleep may respond well to standard behavioral sleep strategies. But a child whose mind is racing with worry needs a different approach, one that addresses the worry itself rather than just the sleep behavior. When researchers compared the two, they found that children with anxiety disorders had sleep problems proportional to their anxiety severity, not to the quality of their bedtime routine. The routine wasn't the lever. The worry was.

Small, Specific Changes at Bedtime Can Break the Cycle

One of the most effective strategies researchers have found is deceptively simple: give worries a designated time slot. Instead of trying to suppress anxious thoughts at bedtime, you schedule a ten-to-fifteen minute "worry time" earlier in the evening. The child names their worries, talks through them with a parent, and practices acknowledging them without solving every one. When worries return at bedtime, the child has a script: "I already dealt with that. It goes in tomorrow's worry time." Research on this approach, drawn from cognitive models of insomnia, shows it reduces pre-sleep cognitive arousal because the brain no longer needs to hold everything at once.

Writing worries down works through a similar mechanism. A bedtime worry journal lets a child externalize what's in their head. For younger children who can't write fluently, "worry dolls" or "worry eaters," small containers or characters that symbolically hold worries, serve the same function. The act of putting the worry somewhere outside their mind gives the brain permission to stop monitoring it. It's a small, concrete step that addresses the core problem: cognitive load at lights-out. These aren't tricks. They work because they target the actual mechanism, pre-sleep arousal, rather than just the behavior of staying in bed.

When researchers tested cognitive-behavioral therapy focused on anxiety in children, they found that sleep improved alongside anxiety, often without any sleep-specific intervention at all. That confirms what the research points to: the anxiety is driving the sleep problem, so addressing the anxiety fixes the sleep. But not every child needs therapy. Many of these strategies, the worry journal, the worry time, relaxation exercises, graduated steps toward sleeping independently, are things parents can start at home. If the sleep problems are severe, if your child is missing school or deeply distressed during the day, professional support can make a real difference. But for many families, the brave first step is smaller than they think. And that step counts.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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