The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Cardboard boxes as baby cribs?

Safety sleep program expands

- By MICHAEL CATALINI

TRENTON, N.J. » Cardboard boxes certainly aren’t new technology. But when they’re linked to a practice that started in Finland decades ago to help babies sleep safely, they’re taking on a new purpose as so-called baby boxes make their way to the U.S.

Parents are beginning to take baby boxes home from hospitals along with their newborns. A Los Angeles-based company has partnered with health officials to give the boxes away for free and an online initiative offers advice aimed at reducing sudden unexpected infant deaths. New Jersey and Ohio were the first to participat­e statewide in the program.

“To new moms: (SUID) was one of my biggest fears and then it happened,” said 35-year-old Chauntia Williams, of Maple Heights, Ohio.

Williams is an advocate for safe sleeping and the boxes after she unexpected­ly lost her 33-dayold daughter Aaliyah nine years ago. Williams said her daughter went to sleep in a crib with cushiony bumpers, stuffed animals and an added blanket beneath the fitted sheet and never woke up. She said the coroner determined the bedding caused the death.

She now uses a box with her son, Bryce, though he’s getting a little too big for it. Her message to new parents: Educate yourselves on safe sleep habits.

“Open your mouth and say I’m concerned about this so you can get the assistance,” Williams said.

Sudden unexpected infant death is a broad category that includes sudden infant death syndrome and accidental suffocatio­n and strangulat­ion that could come from overcrowde­d bassinets or cribs. The boxes aren’t the only option for safe sleeping, of course, but health officials say they’re a useful part of a broader safesleep education program.

Ohio on Wednesday joined New Jersey in offering the cardboard boxes, which double as bassinets, for free. Each box comes filled with a mattress, fitted sheet, onesie and diapers.

The Baby Box Co. is also handing out the boxes in Minneapoli­s, Phoenix and San Francisco, with the goal of expanding to all 50 states. The for-profit company also operates in Canada, Ireland and the United Kingdom. Baby Box University, a nonprofit, maintains a website that coordinate­s the educationa­l component of the program.

The idea for baby boxes started in Finland in the 1930s, and is tied to a sharp drop in sudden infant deaths, according to Dr. Kathryn McCans, a pediatrici­an who chairs New Jersey’s Child Fatality and Near Fatality Review Board. The boxes provide a clutter-free sleep space that has been shown to reduce accidental and unexpected deaths, she said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the U.S. rate of sudden unexpected infant deaths has been declining since the 1990s when public health officials began recommendi­ng parents put infants to sleep on their backs. About 3,700 sudden unexpected infant deaths were reported in the country in 2015.

The boxes are a new idea for many Americans.

“The thought of putting the baby in a box, I was like ‘wow that’s weird,’” said Dolores Peterson, of Camden, New Jersey, who became a first-time mom recently and was among the first to bring home a box.

Peterson’s daughter, Ariabella, just turned 3 months old. She said the program was eye-opening for how much informatio­n she learned about how to prevent sudden unexpected infant death.

McCans says the compliment­ary items like diapers and onesies are nice, but the more important objective behind the boxes is bringing down infant deaths and grounding parents on safe sleep practices: Place babies on their backs to sleep; Don’t use bumpers in cribs; Keep stuffed animals and blankets out of infants’ sleep spaces; Avoid sleeping in the same bed as infants.

“No one brings their baby into bed with them because they want their baby to die,” she said. “They do it because they want to be nurturing and they are, but it’s not safe.”

To get the boxes, prospectiv­e moms can register through babyboxuni­versity.com, watch a handful of videos on sleep safety and pass a quiz. Parents can then take their digital or printedout certificat­es to a participat­ing hospital for their boxes. The boxes can also be sent in the mail, if a nearby hospital is not designated as a distributi­on center.

 ?? (AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE) ?? Dolores Peterson and her three-month-old daughter Ariabella pose for a photograph at their home in Camden, N.J., Monday, March 6, 2017. New Jersey became the first state to send newborn babies and their parents home with a box that doubles as a crib...
(AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE) Dolores Peterson and her three-month-old daughter Ariabella pose for a photograph at their home in Camden, N.J., Monday, March 6, 2017. New Jersey became the first state to send newborn babies and their parents home with a box that doubles as a crib...
 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE ?? Displayed at the home of Dolores Peterson is a box that can be used as a crib in Camden, N.J., Monday, March 6, 2017. New Jersey became the first state to send newborn babies and their parents home with a box that doubles as a crib and full of...
AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE Displayed at the home of Dolores Peterson is a box that can be used as a crib in Camden, N.J., Monday, March 6, 2017. New Jersey became the first state to send newborn babies and their parents home with a box that doubles as a crib and full of...
 ?? (AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE) ?? Dolores Peterson and her three-month-old daughter Ariabella pose for a photograph at their home in Camden, N.J., Monday, March 6, 2017. New Jersey became the first state to send newborn babies and their parents home with a box that doubles as a crib...
(AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE) Dolores Peterson and her three-month-old daughter Ariabella pose for a photograph at their home in Camden, N.J., Monday, March 6, 2017. New Jersey became the first state to send newborn babies and their parents home with a box that doubles as a crib...

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