Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
= 92.2%). There was significant heterogeneity, estimates withstood removal of outliers, and there was no evidence of small-study effects. There was no significant moderation by age, gender, geographical location, caregiver vs. self-reported measures, and type of IPV. Narrative synthesis of the remaining studies suggested that (a) persistent or recent exposure appears to elevate risk, and (b) caregiver distress, trauma-induced hypervigilance, and disrupted co-regulation may be critical factors to consider. In summary, although further rigorous research is warranted, our findings indicate that childhood IPV exposure has a critical role in sleep disturbances across the lifespan.
Hamid et al. (Tue,) studied this question.