AUTHOR=Galbraith Lorna , Bull Kim , Hill Catherine M. TITLE=Video Analysis of Parent–Child Interactions in Behavioral Sleep Disorders: Development of a Scoring Algorithm JOURNAL=Frontiers in Psychiatry VOLUME=Volume 10 - 2019 YEAR=2019 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychiatry/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00861 DOI=10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00861 ISSN=1664-0640 ABSTRACT=Introduction: Behavioural sleep disorders, including chronic insomnia (CI), are generally assessed by subjective parent interview. However, evidence suggests that parental report of children’s overnight behaviours is unreliable, perhaps due to recall bias or confusion due to sleep deprivation. Video technology has been used clinically to capture complex behavioural disorders in children during the day. However, there is no standardised means of analysing child and parent behaviour at bedtime or during the night. We aimed to create an algorithm for this purpose. Methods: Child brain tumour survivors (a population previously shown to have a high prevalence of CI) were screened for difficulties initiating and maintaining sleep using sub-scales from the Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children. Those who screened positive (n=3) then completed a detailed parent interview to confirm a clinical diagnosis of CI. One night of home video footage was obtained from initial settling period to morning waking (SOMNOmedics camera). Footage was imported into BORIS© software and a coding system for parent and child behaviour was developed over multiple iterations until agreeable inter-rater reliability (>70%) was achieved between two independent coders. Results: The final coding categories were: 1) Time domains, 2) Physical environment, 3) Child global status, 4) Location, 5) Activity and 6) Physical interaction. This achieved 74% inter-reliability in its last iteration. Discussion: A statistically acceptable behaviour scoring algorithm was achieved. With further development, this tool could be applied clinically to investigate behavioural insomnia and in research to provide more objective outcome measurement.