Childhood Sleep Difficulties
SNOMED CT Concept for Childhood Sleep Difficulties
SNOMED CT has no single "childhood sleep difficulties" concept; clinicians code from the Sleep disorder hierarchy, parent concept Sleep disorder (disorder) SCTID 39898005, choosing the most specific paediatric subtype such as behavioural insomnia of childhood or a parasomnia. Verify the live SCTID in your terminology server and cross-map to ICD-11.
A precise terminology code is what lets a child's sleep concern travel cleanly from clinic note to EHR to outcome registry.
In short
In SNOMED CT, paediatric sleep difficulties are not captured by a single "childhood" concept; clinicians select from the Sleep disorder hierarchy and qualify by age and clinical picture. The most commonly used parent concept is Sleep disorder (disorder), SCTID 39898005, with more specific children such as Disorder of sleep-wake cycle, Behavioural insomnia of childhood, and parasomnias coded beneath it. Always assign the most specific concept the clinical picture supports rather than a generic label, and remember terminology coding describes — it does not diagnose.The terminology, precisely
SNOMED CT models sleep difficulty as a poly-hierarchy of findings and disorders, so the right concept depends on phenotype, not the patient's age alone:- Sleep disorder (disorder) — SCTID 39898005 — the broad parent concept for clinical sleep disturbance.
- Behavioural insomnia of childhood and limit-setting / sleep-onset association subtypes — paediatric-specific insomnia presentations.
- Parasomnia concepts — night terrors, sleepwalking, confusional arousals — coded discretely.
- Disorder of sleep-wake cycle / circadian rhythm sleep disorder — for phase and rhythm disturbances.
Because SNOMED CT is updated in international and national (SNOMED CT-IN) editions, verify the live SCTID and preferred term in your terminology server before binding it to a record; concept status and synonymy can change between releases. For cross-mapping, align the chosen concept with its ICD-11 sleep–wake disorder equivalent rather than assuming a 1:1 relationship.
When this matters clinically
Code specificity drives downstream value: care-pathway triggers, outcome tracking and audit. A child with persistent settling and night-waking difficulty plus daytime functional impact warrants a structured developmental and sleep history before coding — distinguishing primary behavioural insomnia from sleep disruption secondary to a neurodevelopmental, respiratory or medical cause changes both the SNOMED concept and the referral route.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — terminology coding records a picture, it never replaces clinical assessment. When sleep difficulty co-occurs with developmental concerns, a structured profile clarifies what to code and what to treat. Explore the [Pinnacle network](/), our occupational therapy pathway for regulation and routine support, and how a clinician-administered baseline works in what is the AbilityScore and how is it calculated.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 sleep–wake disorders chapter for cross-mapping; SNOMED International editorial guidance on concept selection and specificity; national SNOMED CT-IN release notes for live identifiers.Next step — Verify the SCTID in your terminology server, then refer children with persistent or impairing sleep difficulty for a structured developmental 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
Persistent settling difficulty, frequent night-waking with daytime functional impact, or sleep disruption co-occurring with developmental concerns — these change both the SNOMED concept and the referral route.
Try this at home
Before binding any sleep concept to a record, confirm the live SCTID and preferred term in your terminology server, as concept status varies between SNOMED CT releases.
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
Is there a single SNOMED CT concept specific to childhood sleep difficulties?
No. SNOMED CT models sleep disturbance as a hierarchy rather than one age-specific code. Clinicians use the parent concept Sleep disorder (disorder), SCTID 39898005, then select the most specific paediatric subtype the clinical picture supports.
Which SNOMED concept should I use for a young child with settling and night-waking problems?
Where the pattern fits behavioural insomnia of childhood, code that specific concept rather than the generic parent; for parasomnias such as night terrors or sleepwalking, use the discrete parasomnia concepts. Confirm the SCTID in your terminology server.
How does the SNOMED concept map to ICD-11?
Map to the equivalent ICD-11 sleep–wake disorder concept rather than assuming a 1:1 relationship. Verify mappings in your live national edition, as both classifications are updated independently.