Baby Matters


Dr. Linda F. Palmer
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"I enjoy your book immensely and am passing on things I learn in it... It is one of the very best books on AP, and the only one to use solid research to back up these 'instinctual' behaviors and choices."
--Joy Berry, AP researcher, LLL leader, AP mom, Director of Education, Children's Museum of Arkansas

 

"Babies would tell you to buy this book! Baby Matters is the latest word on responsive baby care, warmly written and backed up by a wealth of research references and academic articles. This is the book I wish I'd had when my son was born. I would have had a an abundance of helpful information, I would have been reassured that it was OK - in fact, essential - to trust what my heart told me, and I would have had the perfect book to show skeptical friends and relatives."
--Jan Hunt, M.Sc., author of The Natural Child: Parenting from the Heart

 

 

 

 

 

 

QUIZ
What is the Number One Cause
of Infant Death?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Also read Dr. Linda Palmer's letters at: "Ask the Experts" on Mothering Magazine's Mothering.com

Cosleeping & SIDS
Fact Sheet

for United States

Linda Folden Palmer, DC
Author Baby Matters

June 2002

UPDATED OCT 2005

 

FOR REVIEW OF NUMEROUS STUDIES THROUGH 2005, CLICK HERE

 

The Crib Industry wants you to know that 60 "accidental" infant deaths have occurred per year in adult beds for age birth to 2 years. The implication is that these are co-sleeping deaths, but many of these infants are sleeping alone in adult beds.

Why did they forget to mention that safe cosleeping actually reduces bed deaths??

The crib industry (JPMA) provided a large forum for the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to announce this report. Unfortunately, no comparative statistics are provided in their announcements, and even the statistics they report are admittedly anecdotal and irregular. While the report supposedly left out the adult bed deaths that were diagnosed as SIDS (versus accidents), the determination between suffocation and SIDS is often a judgment call. Suffocation in a crib is more often reported as SIDS, while suffocation in an adult bed is reported as "death by adult bed."

The actual SIDS statistics were not measured. Why? Several well-designed research studies demonstrate that SIDS is actually reduced in babies cosleeping along with an aware, protective (non-smoking, non-drug-impaired) mother in a safe bed. Such an announcement would not sell cribs.

The numbers in the largest study on cosleeping around the world suggest that safe cosleeping reduces SIDS!   See graph at bottom. International Child Care Practices Study  

Another large study on SIDS shows 1/5th the risk of death for sleeping infants simply sharing the room with non-smoking adults. This includes many sleep variations. The rate for sharing bed was not measured directly. New Zealand Cot Death Study.

While SIDS can be greatly reduced by breastfeeding, no one ever mentions this.

The Chicago Infant Mortality Study reveals that Breastfeeding Infants have 1/5th the Rate of SIDS. They report a nearly doubled SIDS rate for cosleeping, but this study does not remove the powerful effect of smoking parents from their statistic. When other studies remove this behavior, they find the remaining infants enjoy a greatly lower rate of SIDS for cosleeping versus isolated crib sleeping.There are two kinds of cosleeping, that conscious decision made by highly attentive parents, and that coming from factors such as fatigue from partying or drinking. When sofa sleeping and wedging dangers are also removed, the family bed shines as safest.

Number of U.S. births year 2000: 4,058,814

Total infant deaths year 2000: 28,411
 Age birth to 1 year. (6.9 per thousand)

Number SIDS deaths year 2000: 2,523
 Defined as death with unexplained cause, birth to 1 year.

Total suffocation deaths year 2000: 1,000

Number of crib-related "accidents"/yr: 50

Number of playpen-related deaths/yr: 16

Number deaths/yr attributed to overlying: 19 Most are only "suspected."

Number of babies (0-2) dying in night fires/yr: 230 Many of which may have been retrievable if next to parent, not in another room of home. This is true for abductions and other night dangers as well.

Number of deaths/yr in adult beds reported as entrapment/suffocation between bed and wall, headboard, or other furniture, on waterbed, in headboard railings, or tangled in bedding: 18    With side-rail: 1 That's 19 of the 60.

Number of deaths/yr reported as suffocation of unknown cause in adult bed: 13 These would be SIDS if in a crib. Remember, these do not necessarily involve cosleeping.

Number of deaths/yr in adult beds from prone sleeping: 5 Again, these are considered SIDS in cribs, and they are preventable in adult beds, as in cribs.

4/yr died not from falling out of adult bed, but from suffocating (pile of clothes, plastic bag) or other danger (such as drowning) after falling out.

13% of U.S. infants are routinely cosleeping with nearly 50% sharing bed for part of the nights. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development 2000 Survey,

Number of U.S. infant lives that could be saved per year by exclusive/extended breastfeeding: 9,000 Exclusive/extended breastfeeding cuts SIDS risk and cuts overall infant death risk in half.


Why does our nation rank only 42nd in infant survival?* in the industrialized world (some non-reporting nations are thought to rank better than us as well)? Our difference from the best-ranking nations is a high predominance of formula feeding, isolated sleep, and medical intervention. The highest cosleeping/ breastfeeding nations rank with half our overall infant death rate (and negligable SIDS rates). Remember we rank #1 in medical intervention.

*(The ranking number is lowered by 6 by statisticians to adjust for an assumption that the U.S. has more live premature births, leading to more infant deaths. The statistical impact factor is only slight.)

 

The SIDS/Suffocation Risk Factors for Co-Sleeping:


# Bed sharing not being the accustomed sleep arrangement

# Sofa sleeping
# Smoking parent
# Unsafe space between mattress and headboard or wall
# Prone sleeping
# Parent compromised by drugs or alcohol
# Overly heavy or fluffy bedding
# Sleeping with sibling (for tiny infants) or non-interested adult

and additionally for parental bed sleeping: # Sleeping without protective parent in room

 

 
Clearly cosleeping and adult beds can be made to be safer. This would be a much more appropriate service for the Consumer Product Safety Commission to provide, rather than their thoughtless suggestion against cosleeping. Also, clearly, responsible parents consciously creating a safe cosleeping environment are safely providing the best of all worlds for their baby.

When crib deaths were much higher than they are now, the decision was to make the crib safer, not to throw out the baby. Most of the improvement in the crib death rate occurred from the "Back to Sleep" campaign. Babies can sleep supine in adult beds as well, although there's no evidence that side sleeping with mother, as may occur after nursing, is a risk.

Co-sleepers and side-beds that attach firmly to the mattress are good options for preventing falling out, suffocation, and entrapment, whether baby is in the co-sleeper or in the adult bed. Adjustments should be considered for the space between headboard and mattress, especially for "creepers." Some just put mattresses on the floor, eliminating entrapment concerns.

GRAPH:

Baby Matters
Dr. Linda Palmer: What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Caring for Your Baby

 

 

Cosleeping & SIDS -- 2005
Review of the Latest and Most-Authoritative Studies

Cosleeping It's Natural and Safe

Cosleeping & SIDS Fact Sheet The Facts Against CPSC & JPMA Announcements

Cosleeping in the Media: Media Perpetuating Dis-information

  Infant Sleep and Industry Dollars
A Letter to Doctors

Crying and Caring

Letter on Bed Deaths
Safety in Parental Beds

The Deadly Influence of Formula Survival Comparisons with Breastmilk

Attachment Parenting What is It?

Bonding Matters... The Chemistry of Attachment How parenting behaviors affect hormonal bonding.

Breastfeeding Crime Two children are torn from a family.

Colic Understanding and Eliminating Colic

Coming of Age in America (Much too Soon)
Diet and Parenting Affect Early Puberty

The Dangers of Cow's Milk Overview of chapter from Baby Matters

Iron Supplements for Breastfed Baby? Iron Supplements in the Absence of Anemia May Be Harmful

"Milking Your Bones"
Calcium & Osteoporosis: Milk does not make strong bones.

Vitamin K at Birth: To Inject or Not

I have taken numbers from the "International Child Care Practices Study," Nelson, et al. to create the above graph. The Sudden Infant Death rates for each studied area are plotted against the percent of infants in that area who are cosleeping for over 5 hours per night (percent bed sharing X percent over 5 hours). One more point could be placed at 88% cosleeping for Chongqing, China, with negligible (<.1) SIDS. I have not plotted this point in the graph, as the study authors did not assign an exact SIDS value, and I do not wish to be distorting the graph in favor of conclusions.

The report supplies 1995 statistics. The U.S. was not included. In 1995, the U.S. SIDS rate was 1.0 per thousand. Cosleeping was a little lower than today's estimated "20% for half the time or more."

The authors of the study did not propose any graphs. They did not wish to weigh too much conclusion on their study findings as there were many variables, such as fashion of bedsharing and diagnostic criteria for SIDS.

The material in this website is provided for information purposes only. No part of this text should be taken as, or considered a substitute for, medical diagnosis, medical advice, or medical treatment prescription.

 

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