Tonight, ask yourself: are we co-sleeping because we chose to, or because nothing else works? If it's the second one, that's worth paying attention to — not because co-sleeping is harmful, but because it may be masking a soothing difficulty worth addressing early.
Think of co-sleeping like a cast on a broken arm. For a fresh fracture, the cast is exactly the right tool — it supports healing and causes zero harm. But if the cast stays on for years after the bone has healed, the muscles underneath start to weaken. The cast didn't cause the weakness — leaving it on too long did. Co-sleeping in infancy is the cast doing its job. Persistent co-sleeping past age 4-5, especially when the child can't sleep any other way, is the cast that stayed on too long.
Does sharing a bed with your infant help or harm their psychology, personality, and long-term development?
Tonight, ask yourself: are we co-sleeping because we chose to, or because nothing else works?
If it's the second one, that's worth paying attention to. Not because co-sleeping is harmful, but because it may be masking a soothing difficulty worth addressing early. Intentional co-sleeping is psychologically neutral. Reactive co-sleeping is a signal.
A 30-second honest check-in with yourself.
The Verdict
Co-sleeping doesn't shape your child's personality — your reasons for doing it might.
Think of co-sleeping like a cast on a broken arm. For a fresh fracture, the cast is exactly the right tool — it supports healing and causes zero harm. But if the cast stays on for years after the bone has healed, the muscles underneath start to weaken. The cast didn't cause the weakness — leaving it on too long did. Co-sleeping in infancy is the cast doing its job. Persistent co-sleeping past age 4-5, especially when the child can't sleep any other way, is the cast that stayed on too long.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
What Most People Think
Western pediatrics has spent decades warning that bed-sharing prevents children from learning to self-soothe, creating attachment problems that follow them through childhood.
Reality: The gold-standard attachment test (Strange Situation, N=178) found zero connection between bed-sharing and attachment security. Daytime parenting quality drives attachment — nighttime proximity is irrelevant.
The attachment parenting movement claims co-sleeping produces emotionally healthier, more securely bonded children. Some advocates imply that sleeping separately is practically neglectful.
Reality: Infant co-sleeping shows no measurable psychological benefit either. It's neutral — not harmful, not magical. The decision should come down to physical safety and family sleep quality, not guilt in either direction.
Both sides speak with absolute certainty. The evidence supports neither extreme. The real picture is more boring — and more useful.
What the Evidence Actually Shows
The UK Millennium Cohort Study followed 16,599 children. At first glance, bed-sharing at 9 months appeared linked to behavioral problems (odds ratio of 1.66). But once researchers adjusted for the mother's mental health, family income, and the baby's pre-existing temperament, the association completely disappeared.
Here's what that means in plain terms: it wasn't the bed-sharing that predicted problems. It was the family stress that often accompanies bed-sharing. Remove the stress signal, and the sleeping arrangement itself is invisible in the data.
Bilgin et al., 2024 — Attachment & Human Development
A longitudinal study of 178 families used the Strange Situation procedure — the most respected test of infant-parent attachment in developmental psychology. Result: zero association between bed-sharing in the first 6 months and attachment quality at 18 months.
What does predict attachment? How responsive the mother is during the day. Whether she picks up on the baby's cues while awake. Nighttime proximity is, psychologically speaking, a neutral variable.
Bilgin & Wolke, 2022 — Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics
The Pelotas Birth Cohort tracked 3,583 children in Brazil. Those who bed-shared persistently from infancy through age 6 had double the risk of anxiety and internalizing problems, and 1.7 times the risk of any psychiatric disorder at age 6.
But here's the critical caveat: this doesn't mean the bed-sharing caused the problems. Children with more difficult temperaments are harder to transition to independent sleep. The same traits that predict persistent co-sleeping also predict later behavioral difficulties. This is likely reverse causation.
Santos et al., 2017 — Journal of Affective Disorders
This is the finding that changes everything. When parents co-sleep by choice — for cultural reasons, bonding preference, or breastfeeding convenience — outcomes are neutral to positive. When parents co-sleep because they're desperately trying to soothe a child who won't settle any other way, the outcomes look worse.
But that worse outcome almost certainly reflects the child's pre-existing regulation difficulties, not damage from the sleeping arrangement. The motivation is a marker, not a mechanism.
Bilgin et al., 2024 — multiple cohort analyses
The China Jintan Cohort followed 1,656 children and found that co-sleeping during early childhood predicted increased anxiety (odds ratios: 1.63 to 2.61) and externalizing problems at ages 10-13. This signal is consistent across multiple cohorts — the longer co-sleeping persists beyond toddlerhood, the more it correlates with difficulties.
Same caveat applies: correlation, not causation. But the pattern is consistent enough to be a useful signal for parents.
Chen et al., 2021 — Behavioral Sleep Medicine
One study of 215 children found that co-sleeping for more than 6 months was associated with lower anxiety and fewer self-soothing oral habits like thumb-sucking and pacifier dependence.
Take this one lightly. It's a single small study based on parental recall. Interesting signal, but nowhere near strong enough to build a recommendation on.
Carrillo-Diaz et al., 2022 — European Journal of Orthodontics
The Debate
Santos et al. 2017 — Pelotas Cohort, N=3,583
Persistent co-sleeping through age 6 doubled internalizing problems. The sleeping arrangement may prevent children from developing self-regulation skills during a critical window.
Bilgin et al. 2024 — UK Millennium Cohort, N=16,599
Difficult infant temperaments predict both persistent co-sleeping AND later behavioral problems. Parents of harder-to-soothe babies co-sleep longer out of necessity. The co-sleeping is a symptom, not a cause.
The reverse-causation explanation is more consistent with the data. When large studies control for baseline temperament and family stress, the infant co-sleeping signal disappears entirely. The persistent co-sleeping signal likely reflects pre-existing child difficulties, not damage from the sleeping arrangement itself.
Honest Limitations
The Practical Takeaway
Infancy (0-12 Months)
Firm mattress. No alcohol. No loose bedding. The psychological evidence says co-sleeping at this age won't help or hurt your child's long-term development. Make the decision based on physical safety, breastfeeding goals, and parental sleep quality.
Don't feel guilty either way. Whether you co-sleep or use a crib, your child's emotional development depends on how you respond to them during the day, not where they sleep at night.
Toddlerhood (1-3 Years)
Start moving toward independent sleep. This isn't about toughening up your child. It's about building self-regulation skills during a developmental window when the child is ready to acquire them.
Gradual means gradual. Moving a mattress to the floor beside your bed, then to the hallway, then to their room over weeks or months. Not cold-turkey abandonment.
Preschool and Beyond (4+ Years)
The evidence consistently flags persistent co-sleeping past this age as a risk factor. If your child still can't sleep alone by age 4, treat it as a signal worth investigating. The co-sleeping itself probably isn't the problem — but it may be masking one.
Possible underlying causes: anxiety, family stress, difficult temperament, sensory processing differences. These are all addressable with the right support.
The Nuance
In Japan and parts of Africa where co-sleeping is the universal norm, the negative associations seen in Western studies don't appear. When the practice carries no stigma and no family tension, outcomes are neutral.
This suggests the psychiatric risk isn't from the sleeping arrangement itself. It may be driven by the context of co-sleeping in cultures where it's considered abnormal — the stress and judgment surrounding the practice, not the practice.
Co-sleeping and nighttime breastfeeding are biologically entwined — an adaptation spanning millions of years of human evolution. Some of the benefits people attribute to co-sleeping (lower infant stress hormones, synchronized breathing patterns) may actually come from breastfeeding and skin-to-skin contact, not proximity alone.
Separating the effects of co-sleeping from the effects of breastfeeding is nearly impossible in observational studies, because the two behaviors almost always occur together.
No randomized controlled trial exists — or can exist. You cannot randomly assign human infants to sleeping arrangements. Every finding in this entire presentation comes from observational studies with statistical adjustments for known confounders.
This means causation is never proven — only association. The reverse-causation problem is especially acute: difficult babies may drive parents to co-sleep, and those same difficult temperaments independently predict later behavioral problems. The co-sleeping may just be along for the ride.
Sources
Attachment & Human Development. UK Millennium Cohort Study, N=16,599. Latent class growth analysis of internalizing/externalizing trajectories ages 3-11. Bed-sharing at 9 months: non-significant after confounder adjustment.
Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics. N=178. Strange Situation procedure at 18 months. No association between bed-sharing and attachment security.
Journal of Affective Disorders. Pelotas 2004 Birth Cohort, Brazil, N=3,583. Persistent bed-sharers: OR=2.1 internalizing, OR=1.7 any psychiatric disorder at age 6.
Behavioral Sleep Medicine. China Jintan Cohort, N=1,656. Co-sleeping ages 3-5 predicted preadolescent internalizing (OR: 1.63-2.61) and externalizing problems at ages 10-13.
European Journal of Orthodontics. N=215, cross-sectional. Co-sleeping >6 months associated with lower anxiety and reduced non-nutritive sucking habits.
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How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
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