Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Baby's Death Tied To 'Unsafe Sleep Situation' Prompts Call For Warning

The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2018 01:23 PM
    FREDERICTON — The death of a three-month-old New Brunswick boy has prompted a call for a campaign warning the public about the dangers of unsafe sleeping arrangements for babies.
     
    The coroner determined the infant, who was receiving child protection services, died accidentally of "asphyxiation secondary to an unsafe sleep situation."
     
    The boy's death was revealed in a report from the province's Child Review Death Committee, although no further details were released.
     
    But the review committee says current printed material about the dangers of bed-sharing and use of inappropriate sleep surfaces is not doing enough to prevent child deaths.
     
    It urges the chief medical officer of health to consider a public awareness campaign that could include radio and TV ads. 
     
    The issue of bed-sharing or co-sleeping has been a matter of debate for years.
     
    "The safest place for your baby to sleep or nap is in a crib, cradle or bassinet that meets current Canadian safety regulations," said Rebecca Purdy, a spokeswoman for the Public Health Agency of Canada.
     
    "When babies sleep in places that are not made for them, such as an adult bed, sofa or armchair, they can become trapped and suffocate," she said.
     
    Some parents and advocates like Dr. William Sears, an American pediatrician, talk up the benefits of bed-sharing or co-sleeping with the infant in the parents' bed.
     
     
     
    "An infant and mother sleeping side by side share lots of interactions that are safe and healthy," he writes on his website.
     
    "Sleep-sharing infants tended to sleep more often on their backs or sides and less often on their tummies, a factor that could itself lower the SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome) risk," he wrote.
     
    But Purdy said the risk of suffocation is higher if a baby shares the same sleep surface with an adult or another child.
     
    "The risk is even higher for babies less than four months old," she said.
     
    Instead, she said placing your baby in a crib, cradle or bassinet next to your bed lowers the risk of SIDS.
     
    Purdy said the best sleep environment for a baby is a firm mattress with a fitted sheet.
     
    "Soft bedding, such as pillows, comforters, quilts and bumper pads, can increase the risk of suffocation," she said.
     
    The Canadian Pediatric Society also warns against co-sleeping, saying babies should sleep alone in a crib.
     
    On its website, the society says cribs made before 1986 or those without a Canada Safety Association label are not safe to use. It adds that adult beds, armchairs, waterbeds, couches, daybeds or any "make-shift" bed are not safe places for a baby to sleep.
     
     
     
     
    It says car seats are important safety devices for travel, but when you get home, always put your baby to sleep on his or her back in the crib.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate

    B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia man is back among the living after twice being declared dead by the federal government in a bureaucratic mix-up that began when his social insurance number was incorrectly placed on his mother's death certificate.

    B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate

    Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford

    Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford
    Abbotsford Police Patrol Officers responded to the 2200 block of Windsor Street for a report of a home invasion this morning at 4:28 am.

    Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford

    Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism

    Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism
    The Thunder Bay Police Service says the working group will include members of the service and volunteers from the community.

    Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism

    U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement

    U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement
    Canadian courts must accept the agreed statement of facts that underpinned Khadr's war-crimes conviction in 2010, they argue, regardless of whether he lied under oath when he admitted to tossing a hand grenade that killed the soldier eight years earlier.

    U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement

    Low Uptake For New Immigration Program In Nova Scotia, Numbers Reveal

    Lena Diab says she remains optimistic the program will be a "wonderful tool" — it's aimed at attracting and retaining skilled immigrants for the workforce, as a way of supporting population growth and addressing labour shortages.

    Low Uptake For New Immigration Program In Nova Scotia, Numbers Reveal

    Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference

    Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference
    The mother of a University of Calgary student convicted of sexual interference says the school has asked him to stay away from campus as an online petition demanding that he be expelled grows.

    Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference