The study investigated 6,160 mothers and their children in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Researchers collected information via a questionnaire on wheezing and asthma symptoms every year from the age of one to six years.
They also assessed sleeping patterns at the ages of two and 24 months, using a parental questionnaire. Bed-sharing was defined as the child sharing a bed with either the mother or both parents.
The authors found that children who had bed-shared during infancy (at age two months) did not have a higher risk of wheezing during their first six years of life, or of getting diagnosed with asthma.
This finding could suggest that, rather than bed-sharing causing asthma, parents may take the decision to share a bed with their child if they notice asthma symptoms as a way of monitoring their children.
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However, this hypothesis was not confirmed by the analysis, because toddlers who wheezed as infants were not more likely to bed-share at the age of two years than toddlers who had not wheezed in infancy.
"We postulated that the finding may be explained by parents taking the decision to share a bed with their toddler to monitor their asthma symptoms.
"However our results found no associations between pre-existing asthma symptoms in the first two years of life and bed-sharing at the age of 2 years.
"This could suggest that bed-sharing increases the risk of asthma in some way, but this study does not provide causal evidence of this. There could be a number of factors at play here.
"Alternatively, families might perceive wheezing as problematic and as something that could lead to sleep problems, which might in turn elicit bed-sharing to better monitor these problems.
"More research is needed to identify the factors that may impact on the development of asthma through bed-sharing," said Luijk.
The study is published in the European Respiratory Journal.