nightmares and night terrors
Should a frontline worker refer a child with nightmares and night terrors?
Most nightmares and night terrors in young children are common, benign and fade with age. A frontline worker's role is to reassure, give simple sleep-hygiene advice, and refer the small number with red flags — stiffening or jerking during episodes, daytime exhaustion, onset after trauma, breathing pauses in sleep, or co-occurring developmental or emotional concerns — to a medical officer or paediatrician.
A child waking screaming, or sitting up terrified yet asleep — frightening to witness, yet for a frontline worker this is usually a moment for calm reassurance, not alarm.
In short
Most nightmares and night terrors in young children are common, benign and self-limiting — they fade as the child grows. As a frontline worker (ASHA/PHC), your role is to reassure, give simple sleep-hygiene guidance, and watch for the small number of red flags that warrant referral to a medical officer or paediatrician. Refer when episodes are very frequent, cause daytime exhaustion, involve stiffening/jerking or odd repetitive movements, follow a distressing event, or come alongside developmental, emotional or behavioural concerns.What to know — and when to refer
It helps to distinguish the two, because they need different reassurance:- Nightmares happen in the second half of the night, the child wakes fully, is frightened but can be comforted, and often remembers the dream. Very common in 3–6 year-olds.
- Night terrors happen in the first few hours of sleep, the child may sit up, scream, sweat or look terrified while still asleep, cannot be fully woken, and has no memory of it next morning. Distressing to watch, but the child is not suffering and usually settles back to sleep.
Reassure and advise for the typical picture: a calm, consistent bedtime routine; enough sleep; avoiding screens, scary stories and over-tiredness before bed; not waking the child during a terror but keeping them safe; and gentle comfort after a nightmare.
Refer to the medical officer / paediatrician when you see:
- Episodes with stiffening, jerking, repetitive movements, eye-rolling or tongue-biting, or daytime staring spells — these need prompt medical review to rule out a seizure disorder.
- Very frequent episodes causing daytime drowsiness, irritability or poor feeding/learning.
- Loud snoring, gasping or pauses in breathing during sleep (possible breathing-related sleep problem).
- Onset after a frightening or traumatic event, or alongside marked anxiety, withdrawal or behaviour change.
- Any developmental concern — delays in speech, social connection or milestones — travelling alongside the sleep disturbance.
- Self-injury during episodes, or symptoms persisting well beyond the early childhood years.
The aim is not to alarm families — most need only reassurance and a steadier bedtime. Referral is for the minority where a medical or developmental cause should be ruled out.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a checklist or a single night's observation. When a referred child arrives, our clinicians take a full sleep and developmental history, observe patterns, and shape gentle support around the family's routine. You can learn more about how we support a child's [emotional and behavioural development](/) and, where regulation and routine need building, our occupational therapy team helps families establish calm, predictable bedtimes.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on nightmares, sleep terrors and healthy sleep routines in young children; WHO ICD-11 framework distinguishing sleep-wake disorders; CDC developmental monitoring resources for identifying co-occurring concerns.Next step — Reassure the family first, then if any red flag is present, route the child to your medical officer or book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a calm, clear review.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Refer when episodes involve stiffening, jerking, repetitive movements, eye-rolling or daytime staring (rule out seizures); when they are very frequent and cause daytime drowsiness or poor feeding/learning; with loud snoring, gasping or breathing pauses; after a traumatic event or with marked anxiety; alongside developmental delays; or with self-injury. Otherwise reassure and advise on a calm, consistent bedtime routine.
Try this at home
Coach the family to keep a short note of when episodes happen — early night versus late, whether the child wakes fully and remembers, and any movements or breathing changes. This simple record makes referral decisions and clinical review much clearer.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What's the difference between a nightmare and a night terror?
Nightmares occur in the second half of the night; the child wakes fully, is frightened but comfortable to settle, and often remembers the dream. Night terrors occur in the first few hours; the child may scream, sweat and look terrified while still asleep, cannot be fully woken, and has no memory of it next morning. Both are common in young children.
Should every child with night terrors be referred?
No. Most are benign and self-limiting and need only reassurance and a steadier bedtime routine. Refer only when red flags are present — stiffening or jerking during episodes, daytime exhaustion, breathing pauses in sleep, onset after trauma, marked anxiety, developmental concerns, or self-injury.
Why might stiffening or jerking during a night episode need a doctor?
Movements such as stiffening, jerking, eye-rolling or tongue-biting, or daytime staring spells, can sometimes indicate a seizure disorder rather than a simple sleep terror. These should be reviewed promptly by a medical officer or paediatrician to rule out other causes.
What simple advice can a frontline worker give families?
Encourage a calm, consistent bedtime routine, enough sleep, and avoiding screens, scary stories and over-tiredness before bed. During a terror, keep the child safe rather than waking them; after a nightmare, offer gentle comfort. Most episodes ease with these steps.