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Infant
Sleep
and
Industry Dollars
A
Letter to Doctors
Linda Folden Palmer,
D.C.
Author
Baby Matters
Originally Published
in the
International
Chiropractic Pediatric Association
Newsletter July-August 2002
Updated November 26, 2003
Cosleeping
& SIDS -- 2005
Review
of the Latest and Most-Authoritative Studies
Cosleeping & SIDS Fact Sheet
The Facts Against CPSC & JPMA Announcements
The crib industry
has gotten in bed with the CPSC to announce dramatically that 60 babies
per year die from accidents in adult beds. They plan a large campaign
to educate doctors and retailers about the supposed danger. One detail
they seem to leave out is that a baby sleeping in a safe adult bed next
to their aware and protective mom, (co-sleeping), actually has a decrease
in his risk of SIDS. Sleeping in a crib in another room of the house is
the greatest risk factor for SIDS -- 10 times the risk of sleeping in
the same room as the parents.
According to thier figures, the majority of these "adult bed"
deaths occurred when babies were alone and unattended, and often on sofas,
although the media has directed their attention toward co-sleeping in
a family bed. The CPSC conclusion that no baby should ever be placed in
an adult bed is in no one's best interest (except that of the crib industry).
Great fear is being imposed on families who would otherwise be choosing
to co-sleep. The proper move is to recommend means to make adult beds
safer.
Studies reveal that after leaving the womb there is an important continuum
of mother-provided regulation. While asleep, parental warmth, heartbeat,
and breathing help to regulate proper body temperature and oxygenation
in baby. Co-sleeping also encourages natural breast feeding and comforting,
adding important hormonal and immune regulation.
A century ago, as formula and other industry sales burgeoned, separate
bedrooms for children became associated with images of affluence. However,
a new problem arose -- babies screaming from abandonment throughout the
night. Solutions were now needed to encourage sleep in babies. Formula
companies advertised that (difficult-to-digest) formula promotes longer
sleep. Prone sleeping (an unnatural position for a baby nursing next to
mom) was discovered to extend sleep. Allowing babies to cry for long periods
induces deeper sleep states and has been endorsed as a positive practice.
Today, nearly every early pediatric visit includes the question: "Is
baby sleeping through the night?" -- further encouraging the use
of these unnatural sleep practices.
The problem here is this: long intervals of deep sleep are shown to be
a major cause of SIDS. A co-sleeping baby naturally arouses frequently
to lighter sleep states. On the other hand, prone positioning impinges
the cervical spine and brain stem, and formula-feeding itself triples
the SIDS rate.
Remember our mainly crib-sleeping, bottle-feeding, U.S. infants with the
highest medical attention in the world rank only 42nd (2003 statistic)
in infant survival among reporting nations. Strong, dangerous messages
from the formula and crib industries are being provided regularly to pediatricians.
Parents should be free to make feeding and sleep choices that work best
for their own family, but these choices should be made based on accurate
information.
The
Deadly Influence of Formula
Read
how formula feeding doubles the US infant death rate.
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