Pediatricians Group Urges Removing Bumpers to Prevent Crib Deaths

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome still takes an estimated 2,300 lives a year, but these tragedies have fallen dramatically since 1992, when the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended that all babies be placed on their backs to sleep.

To cut SIDS fatalities further — as well as to combat the rise in sleep-related deaths from other causes, such as suffocation — the academy today issued issued new recommendations.  “Our goal is to ultimately eliminate these deaths completely,” said Dr. Rachel Moon, head of the academy’s SIDS task force, in a news release.

The new recommendations, among other things, urge parents to avoid using bumper pads in cribs. The academy said that they raise the risk of suffocation, strangulation and entrapment, and that there is no evidence that the pads prevent crib injuries.

In addition, the academy urged breastfeeding, saying it is linked to a reduction in SIDS. And the academy added an emphasis on infant immunizations, maintaining that vaccines lower the risk of SIDS by 50 percent. That recommendation comes at a time when many parents have qualms about potential harm from vaccinations and immunization regimens that typically call for babies to get five shots against seven diseases during their two-month and four-month visits.

As MyHealthNewsDaily reports, the academy also repeated previous recommendations such as keeping all loose bedding — including pillows and blankets — out of the crib and avoiding “bed-sharing” — having an infant sleep in the same bed as a parent or another child.

The recommendations follow a recent ban by the Consumer Product Safety Commission on the sale of traditional drop-side baby cribs, a move also intended to reduce crib deaths and injuries.

Separately, the academy issued other recommendations discouraging the viewing of TV or videos by children under age 2, saying that they should be as “screen-free” as possible.

 

STUART SILVERSTEIN

Related Posts:
Hospital Handouts of Infant Formula Rile Breast-Feeding Advocates
New Safety Standards to Prevent Crib Deaths Ban Some Models
Thousands of Babies Hurt Every Year in Crib, Playpen Accidents

Print Print  

Leave a comment