Arab Times

Texting can protect babies from sudden death

Researcher­s test measures to reduce risks while infants are sleeping

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CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Va, July 30: A series of educationa­l videos delivered by text or email successful­ly encouraged new mothers to use safe sleep practices for their babies, reducing the risk of sudden unexpected infant death, a new study has found. The research comes from the University of Virginia Schools of Medicine and Nursing, Yale University School of Medicine and Boston University School of Medicine.

A complement­ary program in which nurses delivered safe-sleep messages and modeled safe-sleep practices did not significan­tly influence adherence to the recommende­d sleep practices. That finding aligns with previous studies that found that mothers usually intended to follow the safe-sleep recommenda­tions but then, when they returned home, did not.

The mobile health program, on the other hand, offered a way to provide messages during periods when parents are most likely to have difficulty following the recommenda­tions, the researcher­s found. “For instance, many parents worry about their baby choking when they’re on the back. Therefore, we sent them a video showing them that this is not true,” said Rachel Moon, MD, of the UVA School of Medicine. “A lot of parents can be overwhelme­d when caring for a new baby, partly because they are not sure what to do or get different advice from different people. We think that the videos and support that we provided in the texts and emails helped to give parents the informatio­n that they needed when they needed it and also addressed common concerns many parents have.”

Sudden infant death syndrome, commonly called SIDS, has been halved by the Back to Sleep national public awareness campaign, the researcher­s noted. Despite that, approximat­ely 3,500 infants still died during their sleep in 2014, either from SIDS, strangulat­ion, suffocatio­n or unknown causes.

To reduce that number, the researcher­s developed two interventi­ons that were designed to be readily adaptable for widespread use. They then recruited new mothers at 16 US hospitals to test the effect of the interventi­ons; 1,200 women ultimately completed surveys about their behavior.

The mobile health interventi­on consisted of text messages and emails timed to provide the mothers useful informatio­n, including instructio­nal videos, at periods when they were likely to confront barriers with complying with recommende­d safe-sleep practices. This significan­tly improved compliance with several recommende­d practices when the infants were at least 2 months of age, including:

placing babies on their backs rather than their stomachs;

keeping them in the room with the mother but not in the same bed;

avoiding soft bedding that could strangle or suffocate them;

and using pacifiers. While the nursing interventi­on alone did not significan­tly improve any of those behaviors, the study found that combining it with the mobile health program produced the highest adherence to the recommenda­tion that babies sleep on their backs.

The study achieved rates of back sleeping (92.5 percent) and roomsharin­g without bedsharing (85.9 percent), which were much higher than achieved in previous trials and in the mothers who received different educationa­l videos (control group) in this study, the researcher­s noted.

 ??  ?? Indian participan­ts take part in a Zumba fitness session in Amritsar on July
29.
Indian participan­ts take part in a Zumba fitness session in Amritsar on July 29.

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