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Friday, March 23, 2012

Is sleeping with your baby okay??

Don’t believe the hype: sleeping with your baby is not okay!
Rosemary Horne, Monash University   
Thursday, 16 February 2012

ffolas_-_baby_in_cot
Image: ffolas/iStockphoto

The safest place for a baby to sleep is on their back, in their own cot or bassinette in the parent’s room.Why?
SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome, is the sudden and unexpected death of an infant under one year of age, usually while sleeping, for which no cause can be found. A number of risk factors increase the chance of an infant dying. They include being placed to sleep on their tummy, allowing them to get their face covered by bedding and exposing them to cigarette smoke.
The Reducing the Risks for SIDS public awareness campaign, which alerted parents to these risks and explained how parents could protect their infants, successfully reduced the incidence of SIDS in Australia by more than 80% over the past 20 years.
It is true that around the world the majority of babies will sleep in the same bed with their mothers. However, in western cultures the sleeping arrangements are generally very different from those in the developing world. We usually sleep in a soft bed which is raised from the floor and have pillows and soft bedding such as doonas. And there are often two adults in the bed with the infant. All of these factors pose a suffocation risk to an infant, in addition to the risk of a parent suffocating their child inadvertently, and therefore, increases the risk of SIDS. More than one in two babies who die suddenly and unexpectedly are found sharing a bed.
The Melbourne Coroner John Olle found that 33 out of 72 SIDS deaths in three years occurred when infants were co-sleeping. Most of these deaths were among babies less than six months of age.
Co-sleeping is most dangerous if the mother smokes, but the risk is also increased if just the father smokes. It is also very dangerous if the parents have been exposed to alcohol or drugs, as they’re less able to be roused.
The safest place for a baby to sleep is on their back, in their own cot or bassinette in the parent’s room. The cot should be made so the baby’s feet meet the foot of the bed (known as “feet to foot”, which prevents the baby from wriggling under the covers) and should also be free of any bedding such as doonas, pillows or bumper pads and soft toys that could cover the baby’s face.
It is critical that parents, carers and health professionals are aware of the risks of co-sleeping and take steps to avoid it. Breastfeeding is protective for SIDS.

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