SLEEPING SAFELY WITH
YOUR BABY
There has been a lot of media claiming that sleeping with your baby
in an adult bed is unsafe and can result in accidental smothering of an
infant. One popular research study came out in 1999 from the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission that showed 515 cases of accidental
infant deaths occurred in an adult bed over an 8-year period between
1990 and 1997. That's about 65 deaths per year. These deaths were not
classified as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), where the cause of
death is undetermined. There were actual causes that were verified upon
review of the scene and autopsy. Such causes included accidental
smothering by an adult, getting trapped between the mattress and
headboard or other furniture, and suffocation on a soft waterbed
mattress.
The conclusion that the researchers drew from this study was that
sleeping with an infant in an adult bed is dangerous and should never
be done. This sounds like a reasonable conclusion, until you consider
the epidemic of SIDS as a whole. During the 8-year period of this
study, about 34,000 total cases of SIDS occurred in the U.S. (around
4250 per year). If 65 cases of non-SIDS accidental death occurred each
year in a bed, and about 4250 cases of actual SIDS occurred overall each
year, then the number of accidental deaths in an adult bed is only 1.5%
of the total cases of SIDS.
There are two pieces of critical data that are missing that would
allow us to determine the risk of SIDS or any cause of death in a bed
versus a crib.
- How many cases of actual SIDS occur in an adult bed versus in a
crib?
- How many babies sleep with their parents in the U.S., and how
many sleep in cribs?
The data on the first question is available, but has anyone examined
it? In fact, one independent researcher examined the CPSC's data and
came to the opposite conclusion than did the CPSC - this data supports
the conclusion that sleeping with your baby is actually SAFER than not
sleeping with your baby (see Mothering Magazine Sept/Oct 2002). As for
the second question, many people may think that very few babies sleep
with their parents, but we shouldn't be too quick to assume this. The
number of parents that bring their babies into their bed at 4 am is
probably quite high. Some studies have shown that over half of parents
bring their baby into bed with them at least part of the night. And the
number that sleep with their infants the whole night is probably
considerable as well. In fact, in most countries around the world
sleeping with your baby is the norm, not the exception. And what is the
incidence of SIDS in these countries? During the 1990s, in Japan the
rate was only one tenth of the U.S. rate, and in Hong Kong, it was only
3% of the U.S. rate. These are just two examples. Some countries do
have a higher rate of SIDS, depending on how SIDS is defined.
Until a legitimate survey is done to determine how many babies
sleep with their parents, and this is factored into the rate of SIDS in a
bed versus a crib, it is unwarranted to state that sleeping in a crib
is safer than a bed.
If the incidence of SIDS is dramatically higher in crib versus a
parent's bed, and because the cases of accidental smothering and
entrapment are only 1.5% of the total SIDS cases, then sleeping with a
baby in your bed would be far safer than putting baby in a crib.
The answer is not to tell parents they shouldn't sleep with their
baby, but rather to educate them on how to sleep with their infants
safely.
Now the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and the Juvenile
Products Manufacturer's Association are launching a campaign based on
research data from 1999, 2000, and 2001. During these three years,
there have been 180 cases of non-SIDS accidental deaths occurring in an
adult bed. Again, that's around 60 per year, similar to statistics from
1990 to 1997. How many total cases of SIDS have occurred during these 3
years? Around 2600 per year. This decline from the previous decade is
thought to be due to the "back to sleep" campaign - educating parents
to place their babies on their back to sleep. So looking at the past
three years, the number of non-SIDS accidental deaths is only 2% of the
total cases of SIDS.
A conflict of interest? Who is behind this new national
campaign to warn parents not to sleep with their babies? In addition to
the USCPSC, the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association (JPMA) is
co-sponsoring this campaign. The JPMA? An association of crib
manufacturers. This is a huge conflict of interest. Actually, this
campaign is exactly in the interest of the JPMA.
What does the research say?
The September/October 2002 issue of Mothering Magazine presents research
done throughout the
whole world on the issue of safe sleep. Numerous studies are presented
by experts of excellent
reputation. And what is the magazine's conclusion based on all this
research? That not only is
sleeping with your baby safe, but it is actually much safer than having
your baby sleep in a crib.
Research shows that infants who sleep in a crib are twice as likely to
suffer a sleep related fatality
(including SIDS) than infants who sleep in bed with their parents.
Education on safe sleep. I do support the USCPSC's
efforts to research sleep safety and to decrease the incidence of SIDS,
but I feel they should go about it differently. Instead of launching a
national campaign to discourage parents from sleeping with their
infants, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission should educate
parents on how to sleep safely with their infants if they choose to do
so.
TIPS ON CO-SLEEPING SAFELY
Here are some ways to educate parents on how to sleep safely with
their baby:
- Use an Arm's Reach® Co-Sleeper® Bassinet. An alternative to
sleeping with baby in your bed is the Arm's Reach®
Co-Sleeper®. This crib-like bed fits safely and snuggly adjacent to
parent's bed. The co-sleeper®
arrangement gives parents and baby their own separate sleeping spaces
yet, keeps baby within arm's reach for easy
nighttime care. To learn more about the Arm's Reach® Co-Sleeper®
Bassinet visit
www.armsreach.com.
- Take precautions to prevent baby from rolling out of bed,
even though it is unlikely when baby is sleeping next to mother. Like
heat-seeking missiles, babies automatically gravitate toward a warm
body. Yet, to be safe, place baby between mother and a guardrail or push
the mattress flush against the wall and position baby between mother
and the wall. Guardrails enclosed with plastic mesh are safer than those
with slats, which can entrap baby's limbs or head. Be sure the
guardrail is flush against the mattress so there is no crevice that baby
could sink into.
- Place baby adjacent to mother, rather than between mother
and father. Mothers we have interviewed on the subject of sharing sleep
feel they are so physically and mentally aware of their baby's presence
even while sleeping, that it's extremely unlikely they would roll over
onto their baby. Some fathers, on the other hand, may not enjoy the same
sensitivity of baby's presence while asleep; so it is possible they
might roll over on or throw out an arm onto baby. After a few months of
sleep-sharing, most dads seem to develop a keen awareness of their
baby's presence.
- Place baby to sleep on his back.
- Use a large bed, preferably a queen-size or king-size. A
king-size bed may wind up being your most useful piece of "baby
furniture." If you only have a cozy double bed, use the money that you
would ordinarily spend on a fancy crib and other less necessary baby
furniture and treat yourselves to a safe and comfortable king-size bed.
- Some parents and babies sleep better if baby is still in
touching and hearing distance, but not in the same bed. For them, a
bedside co-sleeper is a safe option.
Here are some things to avoid:
- Do not sleep with your baby if:
- You are under the influence of any drug (such as alcohol or
tranquilizing medications) that diminishes your sensitivity to your
baby's presence. If you are drunk or drugged, these chemicals lessen
your arousability from sleep.
- You are extremely obese. Obesity itself may cause sleep
apnea in the mother, in addition to the smothering danger of pendulous
breasts and large fat rolls.
- You are exhausted from sleep deprivation. This lessens
your awareness of your baby and your arousability from sleep.
- You are breastfeeding a baby on a cushiony surface, such
as a waterbed or couch. An exhausted mother could fall asleep
breastfeeding and roll over on the baby.
- You are the child's baby-sitter. A baby-sitter's awareness
and arousability is unlikely to be as acute as a mother's.
- Don't overheat or overbundle baby. Be particularly aware of overbundling if baby is sleeping with a parent. Other warm bodies are an added heat source.
- Don't wear lingerie with string ties longer than eight inches. Ditto for dangling jewelry. Baby may get caught in these entrapments.
- Avoid pungent hair sprays, deodorants, and perfumes. Not only will these camouflage the natural maternal smells that baby is used to and attracted to, but foreign odors may irritate and clog baby's tiny nasal passages. Reserve these enticements for sleeping alone with your spouse.
- Parents should use common sense when sharing sleep. Anything that could cause you to sleep more soundly than usual or that alters your sleep patterns can affect your baby's safety. Nearly all the highly suspected (but seldom proven) cases of fatal "overlying" I could find in the literature could have been avoided if parents had observed common sense sleeping practices.The bottom line is that many parents share sleep with their babies. It can be done safely if the proper precautions are observed. The question shouldn't be "is it safe to sleep with my baby?", but rather "how can I sleep with my baby safely." The data on the incidence of SIDS in a bed versus a crib must be examined before the medical community can make a judgment on sleep safety in a bed.