Salada Katherine O, Badke Colleen M
Division of Hospital Based Medicine, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States.
Front Pediatr. 2022 May 3;10:880713. doi: 10.3389/fped.2022.880713. eCollection 2022.
Sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) is the leading cause of death in children 28 days to 1 year of age. The study aim was to identify opportunities for healthcare professionals to provide families with education on sleep and prevention of SUID.
We performed a retrospective chart review of SUID infants over 10 years (12/2010-12/2020). The study included patients 0-12 months who presented to single institution with SUID (including asphyxia, suffocation, and SIDS). Baseline descriptive characteristics, sleep patterns (location, position, co-sleeping, presence of pillows/blankets), and prior healthcare encounters (type, duration, frequency, timing) were described.
Thirty-five infants met inclusion criteria. Twenty-three percent of families routinely practiced unsafe sleep, while 63% practiced unsafe sleep at the time of SUID. All unsafe sleep behaviors increased during the SUID event compared to routine, including inappropriate location (60%), co-sleeping (46%), and inappropriate position (37%) at the time of SUID. There were 54 total healthcare encounters (mean 1.5 per patient +/- 2.1) prior to SUID. Primary care physicians (57%) and NICU (29%) were the most frequent prior healthcare encounters, however visits spanned multiple specialties. Twenty-six percent had a healthcare encounter within 7 days of their death.
We demonstrated the frequency and variability in healthcare encounters among SUID infants prior to their death. Majority of infants had prior healthcare encounters, with 26% seen by healthcare professionals within 7 days of their death. These results highlight the important role healthcare professionals across all specialties have the potential to play in educating families about safe sleep and SUID.
婴儿猝死(SUID)是28天至1岁儿童死亡的主要原因。本研究的目的是确定医疗保健专业人员为家庭提供睡眠和预防婴儿猝死教育的机会。
我们对10年间(2010年12月至2020年12月)的婴儿猝死病例进行了回顾性图表审查。该研究纳入了0至12个月在单一机构出现婴儿猝死的患者(包括窒息、闷死和婴儿猝死综合征)。描述了基线描述性特征、睡眠模式(地点、姿势、同床睡眠、是否有枕头/毯子)以及先前的医疗接触情况(类型、持续时间、频率、时间)。
35名婴儿符合纳入标准。23%的家庭经常采取不安全睡眠方式,而63%的家庭在婴儿猝死时采取不安全睡眠方式。与常规情况相比,所有不安全睡眠行为在婴儿猝死事件期间均有所增加,包括猝死时不合适的睡眠地点(60%)、同床睡眠(46%)和不合适的姿势(37%)。在婴儿猝死前共有54次医疗接触(平均每名患者1.5次±2.1次)。初级保健医生(57%)和新生儿重症监护病房(29%)是最常见的先前医疗接触,但就诊涉及多个专科。26%的婴儿在死亡前7天内有过医疗接触。
我们展示了婴儿猝死前医疗接触的频率和变异性。大多数婴儿有过先前的医疗接触,26%的婴儿在死亡前7天内接受过医疗保健专业人员的诊治。这些结果凸显了所有专科的医疗保健专业人员在教育家庭安全睡眠和预防婴儿猝死方面可能发挥的重要作用。