The Maui News

Blankets, bed-sharing common in accidental baby suffocatio­ns

- By LINDSEY TANNER The Associated Press

Study reveals that there’s been little change in unsafe sleep practices

CHICAGO — Accidental suffocatio­n is a leading cause of injury deaths in U.S. infants and common scenarios involve blankets, bed-sharing with parents and other unsafe sleep practices, an analysis of government data found.

These deaths “are entirely preventabl­e. That’s the most important point,” said Dr. Fern Hauck, a co-author and University of Virginia expert in infant deaths.

Among 250 suffocatio­n deaths, roughly 70 percent involved blankets, pillows or other soft bedding that blocked infants’ airways. Half of these soft bedding-related deaths occurred in an adult bed where most babies were sleeping on their stomachs.

Almost 20 percent suffocated when someone in the bed accidental­ly moved against or on top of them, and about 12 percent died when their faces were wedged against a wall or mattress.

The authors studied 201114 data from a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention registry of deaths in 10 states. The results offer a more detailed look at death circumstan­ces than previous studies using vital records, said lead author Alexa Erck Lambert, a CDC researcher.

The authors said anecdotal reports suggest there’s been little change in unsafe sleep practices in more recent years.

“It is very, very distressin­g that in the U.S. we’re just seeing this resistance, or persistenc­e of these high numbers,” Hauck said.

The study was published today in Pediatrics.

For years, the U.S. government and the American Academy of Pediatrics have waged safe-sleep campaigns aimed at preventing accidental infant suffocatio­ns and strangulat­ions and sudden infant death syndrome. These include “back to sleep” advice promoting having babies sleep on their backs, which experts believe contribute­d to a decline in SIDS deaths over nearly 30 years. But bed-sharing has increased, along with bed-related accidental suffocatio­ns — from 6 deaths per 100,000 infants in 1999 to 23 per 100,000 in 2015, the researcher­s note.

Dr. Rachel Moon, a University of Virginia pediatrics professor not involved in the study, said the results are not surprising.

“Every day I talk to parents who have lost babies. They thought they were doing the right thing, and it seems safe and it seems OK, until you lose a baby,” Moon said.

Some studies have found bed-sharing increases breastfeed­ing and it’s common in some families because of cultural traditions. Others simply can’t afford a crib.

Erika Moulton, a stay-athome mom in suburban New York, said bed-sharing was the only way her son, Hugo, would sleep as a newborn. Moulton struggled with getting enough sleep herself for months, and while she knew doctors advise against it, bed-sharing seemed like the only option.

Now 14 months old, “he’s still in our bed,” she said. “Trying to transition him out is a little difficult.”

The pediatrici­ans group recommends that infants sleep on firm mattresses in their own cribs or bassinets but in their parents’ room for the first year. A tight-fitting top sheet is the only crib bedding recommende­d, to avoid suffocatio­n or strangulat­ion.

Young babies can’t easily move away from bedding or a sleeping parent; all of the study deaths were in infants younger than 8 months old.

 ?? AP file photo ?? A doctor demonstrat­es how an infant can die due to unsafe sleeping practices using a scene re-enactment doll in Norfolk, Va., in this 2012 photo. An analysis of five years of CDC data released today found most accidental suffocatio­n deaths in U.S. infants occur when babies are sleeping on their stomachs in adult beds with blankets and pillows.
AP file photo A doctor demonstrat­es how an infant can die due to unsafe sleeping practices using a scene re-enactment doll in Norfolk, Va., in this 2012 photo. An analysis of five years of CDC data released today found most accidental suffocatio­n deaths in U.S. infants occur when babies are sleeping on their stomachs in adult beds with blankets and pillows.

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