How to reduce the risk of cot death

Parents are currently advised not to share their bed with a young baby after new evidence that the practice increases the risk of cot death.

Sadly each year in the UK, around 350 babies die suddenly and unexpectedly of sudden infant death syndrome or cot death, as it is commonly called.

One of the biggest studies of its kind has concluded that co-sleeping puts babies under eight weeks old at a “small but significantly” higher risk of smothering or over-heating.

The new findings, published in the Lancet, come from a study of 745 cot death victims and 2,400 healthy babies from 17 European countries. It confirmed that the biggest risk to babies comes from tobacco smoke in the home, combined with co-sleeping. Prof Robert Carpenter, of the The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who led the research, said the study showed the dangers of even non-smoking parents sharing a bed with their baby. For children under eight weeks old, co-sleeping increased the risk of sudden infant death by 1.6 per cent.

Previously, only parents who smoked, who were excessively tired or under the influence of drink or drugs were told not to share a bed with their baby. Joyce Epstein, the director of the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death says” The safest place for a baby to sleep is in a cot in the parents’ bedroom”.

You can do a number of things to decrease your baby’s risk of cot death, but at present there’s no way to prevent it. Below are the important steps you can take to help reduce the risk.

  • Place your baby on his back to sleep; a healthy baby is not more
    likely to choke in this position and sleeping on the back has been
    shown to reduce the incidence of cot death
  • Do not smoke during pregnancy
  • Make your baby’s room a smoke-free zone, and don’t smoke if
    he comes into bed with you
  • Keep your baby’s cot in your bedroom for the first six months
  • Don’t let your baby get too hot; check his temperature by putting
    your hand on his tummy or the back of his neck. Keep the room your
    baby sleeps in at a comfortable temperature (around 64 degrees F/
    18 degrees C).
  • Make up the cot with the baby in the ‘feet to foot’ position.
    The sheets and blankets are made up half way down the cot and tucked
    under the mattress, so that your baby lies with his feet at the end
    of the cot. This makes it difficult for your baby to wriggle down
    under the bedclothes
  • Use a sheet and blankets so you can take a layer or two off if he
    is hot, or add another layer if he is cold
  • Don’t use duvets or pillows for babies under one year
  • Your baby can also wriggle his head under a loose cot bumper or large
    soft toy, so you may prefer not to put these into the cot until he
    is over a year
  • Have your baby immunised – there’s evidence to show that this reduces
    the risk of cot death
  • Don’t fall asleep on a sofa with your baby, there is a risk of rolling
    on to them
  • If you smoke, have been drinking alcohol, are very tired or if you’re
    taking drugs or medication that may make you sleepy, don’t share a
    bed with your baby
  • Even if you don’t smoke or haven’t been drinking, co-sleeping
    is no longer considered safe for your baby. For children under eight
    weeks old, co-sleeping increases the risk of sudden infant death by
    1.6 per cent.
  • If your baby is unwell, seek medical advice promptly.

For more information on how to reduce the risk of cot death, or if you have any
concerns surrounding cot death, the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths (FSID) runs
a 24-hour helpline: 020 7233 2090. Alternatively you can visit the FSID website.

These recommendations for reducing the risk of cot death are published in a leaflet called Reduce the Risk, published jointly by the Department of Health and the Foundation for the Study of Infant Death (FSID).

A copy of the leaflet can be obtained from:

The Department of Health
PO Box 410
Wetherby LS23 7LN
Fax: 01623 724 524
Tel: 0800 555 777
Email: doh@prologistics.co.uk


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