• Title of article

    Bed Sharing Among Black Infants and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: Interactions With Other Known Risk Factors

  • Author/Authors

    Fu، نويسنده , , Linda Y. and Moon، نويسنده , , Rachel Y. and Hauck، نويسنده , , Fern R. Hauck، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    376
  • To page
    382
  • Abstract
    Objective aring has been associated with sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and may contribute to the racial disparity seen in infant mortality. It is unclear how bed sharing interacts with other factors to impact SIDS risk. We aimed to measure the effects of bed sharing on risk of SIDS in blacks and to determine whether the risk is modified by other characteristics of the sleep environment. s teristics of 195 black infants who died of SIDS were compared with matched controls. The moderating influence of known SIDS risk factors on the effect of bed sharing on risk of SIDS was examined using logistic regression. s half (47.4%) of the study population bed shared during the last/reference sleep (58% cases and 37% controls). Bed sharing was associated with 2 times greater risk of SIDS compared with not bed sharing. The deleterious effect of bed sharing was more pronounced with a soft sleep surface, pillow use, maternal smoking, and younger infant age. However, bed sharing was still associated with an increased risk of SIDS, even when the infant was not using a pillow or sleeping on a firm surface. The strongest predictors of SIDS among bed-sharing infants were soft sleep surface, nonuse of a pacifier, and maternal smoking during pregnancy. sions aring is a common practice among black infants. It is associated with a clear and strong increased risk of SIDS, which is even greater when combined with other known risk factors for SIDS. This practice likely contributes to the excess incidence of SIDS among blacks, and culturally competent education methods must be developed to target this high-risk group.
  • Keywords
    bed sharing , risk factors , SIDS , Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
  • Journal title
    Academic Pediatrics
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Academic Pediatrics
  • Record number

    1745866