Correlates of prone infant sleeping position by period of birth.
Open Access
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood
- Vol. 72 (3) , 204-208
- https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.72.3.204
Abstract
Intervention to avoid the prone sleeping position during infancy has occurred in various countries after evidence that it increases the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). This study examined cohort data to determine if correlates of the prone position differed by period of birth, before intervention (1 May 1988 to 30 April 1991) compared with after intervention (1 May 1991 to 30 April 1992). The usual prone sleeping position was more closely associated with the following factors after intervention: teenage motherhood, low maternal education, paternal unemployment, unmarried motherhood, non-specialist antenatal care, not reading books to prepare for a baby, poor smoking hygiene, and bottle feeding. For example, the association of usual prone position with being unmarried shown by the odds ratio (95% confidence interval) was 0.54 (0.47 to 0.63) in the period before intervention and 1.92 (1.18 to 3.15) in the period after intervention. The alteration in correlates of the prone position reported here provide an example to support the theoretical concept that well known 'modifiable' risk factors for disease tend to be associated with each other in both populations and individuals. This phenomenon was not evident in the population before intervention, that is, before the prone sleeping position became a well known SIDS risk factor.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Assessment of the Impact of Public Health Activities to Reduce the Prevalence of the Prone Sleeping Position During Infancy: The Tasmanian Cohort StudyPreventive Medicine, 1994
- Sociodemographic factors associated with sleeping position and location.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1993
- Factors Potentiating the Risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Associated with the Prone PositionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Rebreathing expired gases from bedding: a cause of cot death?Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1993
- Is the decline in cot deaths due to child-health reorganisation?The Lancet, 1993
- Further evidence supporting a causal relationship between prone sleeping position and SIDSJournal of Paediatrics and Child Health, 1992
- Prospective cohort study of prone sleeping position and sudden infant death syndromeThe Lancet, 1991
- The development of a model for predicting infants at high risk of sudden infant death syndrome in TasmaniaPaediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 1990
- Choice of sleeping position for infants: possible association with cot death.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1990
- Modeling and variable selection in epidemiologic analysis.American Journal of Public Health, 1989