Pediatric Sleep Disorders & Clinical Sleep Challenges

The Sleep Problem No Routine Can Fix

Jess ThorntonJess Thornton·
The Sleep Problem No Routine Can Fix

You've already tried the earlier bedtime. The later bedtime. The white noise. The blackout curtains. The melatonin gummies from the pediatrician's waiting room.

And still, your kid can't sleep, won't sleep, or wakes up looking like they ran a marathon instead of resting.

Here's what the internet doesn't say loudly enough: not every sleep problem is a routine problem. Some sleep issues are clinical, and no amount of schedule-tweaking will fix them. Knowing the difference is the whole game.

Two types of sleep problems

Behavioral sleep problems are what most families deal with: difficulty settling at bedtime, waking and needing a parent to resettle, resistance to a consistent schedule. These respond well to routines, clear expectations, and patience. They're real and exhausting, but they're trainable.

Clinical sleep disorders are different. They're physiological — happening in the body and brain in ways that habits cannot override. Treating them like behavioral problems wastes everyone's time and energy.

Here's what to look for in each category.

Night terrors and sleepwalking: scary, but not behavioral

If your child has ever screamed inconsolably at 2 AM while appearing awake but completely unreachable, you've witnessed a night terror. They're not dreaming. They're not awake. They won't remember it in the morning. Trying to comfort or reason with them during an episode often makes things worse.

Night terrors and sleepwalking are classified as parasomnias — disruptions in the transitions between sleep stages. They peak in preschool and early school years, and most children outgrow them.

What actually helps:

  1. Don't try to wake the child during a night terror. Let it run its course and make sure they're physically safe.
  2. Childproof the sleep environment if sleepwalking is happening — gates on stairs, locked exterior doors, nothing dangerous within reach.
  3. Overtiredness is a known trigger, so consistent bedtimes reduce frequency. But this is managing triggers, not correcting behavior. There's nothing to correct.

If episodes are happening multiple times a week, lasting more than 30 minutes, or involving any injury risk, that's a conversation for your pediatrician.

Sleep-disordered breathing: the hidden one

Pediatric sleep apnea is significantly underdiagnosed because it doesn't look like adult sleep apnea. You don't need an overweight adult — you need a child with enlarged tonsils and adenoids, which is extremely common.

Signs worth flagging:

  • Snoring more than three nights a week
  • Consistent mouth breathing during sleep
  • Pauses in breathing followed by gasps (see your doctor promptly for this one)
  • Restless, sweaty sleep
  • Daytime behavior that looks like attention problems or emotional dysregulation

That last point is the sneaky one. Untreated sleep apnea in children often presents as hyperactivity and attention difficulties during the day. Some kids who appear to have focus problems are actually running chronically sleep-deprived from obstructed airways. It's worth ruling out before, or alongside, any other evaluation.

If any of these signs are present, ask your pediatrician about a referral to a sleep specialist or ENT. This one often resolves with a tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy. There is nothing in your bedtime routine toolkit that addresses obstructed airways.

Teen sleep: it's not defiance, it's biology

The teenager who cannot fall asleep before midnight and wakes up destroyed at 6 AM is not being dramatic or difficult. Their circadian biology is working against them.

A 2025 study published in Current Biology established something important: the adolescent circadian clock does not sync to natural light the way adult clocks do. It syncs primarily to social and behavioral patterns — school schedules, social activities, and artificial light exposure (Current Biology / Cell Press, 2025). This means early school start times are asking a biologically shifted internal clock to perform in the pre-dawn hours. The researchers found that adolescents' melatonin rhythms closely tracked their actual behavioral patterns during the school week, explaining why the mismatch is so physiologically disruptive.

This is not a parenting problem or a discipline problem. It is a biology problem.

What actually moves the needle:

  1. Advocate for later school start times through your school board. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends middle and high schools start no earlier than 8:30 AM. This is a policy issue worth the energy.
  2. Protect morning light exposure. Natural light within the first hour of waking helps anchor the circadian signal.
  3. Reduce bright screen light in the 90 minutes before bed. Artificial light directly delays melatonin timing.
  4. Minimize social jet lag. Keeping weekend wake times within about an hour of weekday times prevents the circadian mismatch that compounds the problem every Monday morning.

Check with your pediatrician before using melatonin supplements regularly, particularly if a sleep disorder may be a factor.

ADHD and sleep: the loop nobody warns you about

Sleep problems are extremely common in children with ADHD, and the relationship runs in both directions. ADHD brains often have delayed sleep onset, racing thoughts at bedtime, and genuine difficulty transitioning from activity to rest. Meanwhile, poor sleep makes ADHD symptoms worse. It's a reinforcing cycle.

A comprehensive 2024 systematic review in Pediatrics found that behavioral parent training is effective for managing ADHD symptoms across domains, and structured behavioral approaches do help with sleep-adjacent routines as well (American Academy of Pediatrics, 2024). Clear transitions, consistent timing, and predictable expectations make a real difference. But medication timing also matters: when stimulant medications are dosed can have a significant effect on sleep onset, and that is a conversation worth having with your prescribing physician rather than trying to optimize on your own.

If your child has ADHD and sleep is consistently difficult, put it on the agenda at your next appointment. This is not an area to troubleshoot in isolation.

The triage question

Here's the framework: if you ran a perfect bedtime routine — same time every night, dark room, no screens, calm transition — would the problem still exist?

If yes, or if you suspect yes: you're likely looking at something clinical that needs medical evaluation, not routine adjustment.

If you're not sure: track one week of sleep data. Note bedtime, approximate time to fall asleep, any nighttime events, morning wake time, and daytime functioning. That log gives you something concrete to bring to your pediatrician and takes the guesswork out of the conversation.

Routines are powerful — but only when the underlying issue is behavioral. When it isn't, the most efficient move you can make is the one that gets you to the right conversation faster.

References

Recommended Products

These are not affiliate links. We do not earn any money from these links or from anything else on this website.

Jess isn’t a person — she’s your calm, caffeinated AI parenting sidekick. If she were human, she’d be the grounded fixer with answers, snacks, and a plan. The reliable one. The steady one. The friend who tells the truth and makes you laugh while everything’s on fire. Think former operations manager with mom-of-four energy — practical, sharp, and built for the 6 AM meltdown (yes, yours too).