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Bed sharing among black infants and sudden infant death syndrome: interactions with other known risk factors.

机译:黑人婴儿的床共享和婴儿猝死综合征:与其他已知风险因素的相互作用。

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OBJECTIVE: Bed sharing 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. METHODS: Characteristics 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. RESULTS: Almost 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. CONCLUSIONS: Bed sharing 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.
机译:目的:床共享与婴儿猝死综合征(SIDS)有关,可能导致婴儿死亡率方面的种族差异。目前尚不清楚共享床如何与其他因素相互作用以影响小岛屿发展中国家的风险。我们的目标是衡量黑人黑人分床共享对SIDS风险的影响,并确定该风险是否会因睡眠环境的其他特征而改变。方法:将195例死于SIDS的黑人婴儿的特征与配对对照进行比较。使用logistic回归分析了已知SIDS危险因素对病床共享对SIDS危险的影响的调节作用。结果:近一半(47.4%)的研究人群在上一次/参考睡眠中共享床位(58%的病例和37%的对照)。与未共享床相比,共享床与SIDS的风险高出2倍。柔软的睡眠表面,使用枕头,产妇吸烟和婴儿年龄较小时,卧床共用的有害影响更为明显。但是,即使婴儿没有使用枕头或在坚硬的表面上睡觉,床共享仍然会增加SIDS的风险。在共享床型婴儿中,SIDS的最强预测指标是柔软的睡眠表面,不使用安抚奶嘴以及孕妇在怀孕期间吸烟。结论:床共享是黑人婴儿的一种普遍做法。它与SIDS的明显而强烈的增加相关,而与其他已知的SIDS危险因素结合使用时,甚至更大。这种做法可能导致黑人中SIDS的发生率过高,必须针对这一高风险人群开发具有文化背景的教育方法。

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