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CPSC Warns
Against Placing Babies in Adult Beds
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WASHINGTON, Sept. 29, 1999 - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is warning parents and caregivers about the dangers of placing babies to sleep in adult beds. after a study found an average of 64 deaths a year. "Don't sleep with your baby or put the baby down to sleep in an adult bed," said CPSC Chairman Ann Brown. "The only safe place for babies is in a crib that meets current safety standards and has a firm, tight-fitting mattress. Place babies to sleep on their backs and remove all soft bedding and pillow-like items from the crib." The CPSC study published in the October issue of the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine found that placing babies to sleep in adult beds puts them at risk of suffocation or strangulation. It found an average 64 deaths per year to babies under the age of 2 years placed to sleep in adult beds, including waterbeds and daybeds. A review of incident data from January 1990 to December 1997 linked adult beds to at least 515 baby deaths. Analysis of the deaths revealed four major hazard patterns:
Of the 515 deaths, 121 were
reported to be due to a parent, caregiver or sibling rolling on top of
or against the baby while sleeping. More than three-quarters of these
deaths occurred to infants younger than 3 months. The other 394 deaths
resulted from suffocation or from strangulation caused by entrapment of
the child's head in various structures of the bed. Entrapments occurred
between the mattress and the wall, bed frame, headboard, footboard, bed
railings or adjacent furniture. |
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