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    Soft bedding leading most cause of infant suffocation during sleep: AAP

    Written by Hina Zahid Published On 2019-04-23T19:20:10+05:30  |  Updated On 23 April 2019 7:20 PM IST
    Soft bedding leading most cause of infant suffocation during sleep: AAP

    According to a new study, Soft bedding is the leading most cause of infant suffocation during sleep. American Academy of Paediatrics has recommended several measures to counter this calamity.


    Authors said these deaths are preventable if families follow the AAP’s recommendations that infants sleep on their backs in a crib or bassinet with no soft objects or bedding. Soft-bedding accounts for the majority of sleep-related infant suffocation deaths, particularly when the baby is sleeping prone, according to an analysis in Pediatrics.


    More U.S. infants die each year from accidental suffocation than any other type of injury, and most of these cases occur in bed, according to “Sleep-Related Infant Suffocation Deaths Attributable to Soft Bedding, Overlay, and Wedging,”


    Because these deaths have been on the rise, authors including several from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), sought to better characterize them to improve prevention strategies.


    They analyzed 2011-’14 data from the CDC’s Sudden Unexpected Infant Death (SUID) Case Registry, which includes about one-third of cases, and found 14% of the 1,812 deaths involved suffocation. Infants had a median age of 3 months, and the majority were male.


    Among the findings:



    • Soft bedding was the most common cause of suffocation (69%), followed by an overlay (a person on top of or against the infant; 19%) and wedging between objects (12%).



    • In 92% of soft-bedding deaths, the infant was not in the supine position; nearly 50% of soft-bedding deaths occurred in adult beds.


    • Wedging deaths most often happened when the infant became caught between an adult mattress and wall.





    About 69% of the suffocation cases involved soft bedding like a blanket or pillow, 19% occurred when a person was on top of or against the infant (overlay) and in 12%, the infant was wedged between objects, according to the study.


    In the soft bedding cases, the median age was 3 months, and nearly half occurred in an adult bed. Almost all these infants were laying on their stomach or side. Blankets were the most common soft object preventing the child from breathing followed by adult mattresses and pillows.


    In overlay cases, the median age was slightly lower at 2 months, and 71% occurred in an adult bed. Nearly a quarter involved an adult impaired by alcohol or drugs, and 14% occurred while breastfeeding. Neck or chest compression was more common than obstruction of the nose and mouth.


    Wedging cases typically occurred in older infants with a median age of 6 months, and 73% occurred in an adult bed. Infants often were trapped between a mattress and a wall.


    Authors noted that in all three types of suffocation, infants most commonly were sleeping in an adult bed and were not on their backs.


    During the study period, about 87 infants per 100,000 died of SUID. That rate would have dropped to 75 per 100,000 if suffocation deaths had been prevented.


    For more details click on the link: https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2018-3408
    breastfeedingCDCCenters for Disease Control and Preventiondrugsinfant suffocationinfant suffocation deathsinjurypediatricsSleepsleep-relatedSoft beddingsudden unexpected infant deathsuffocation

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    Hina Zahid
    Hina Zahid
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