Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol Medical School, Bristol, UK
Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol Medical School, Bristol, UK.
BMJ Open. 2023 Oct 13;13(10):e076751. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-076751.
Using the National Child Mortality Database, this work aims to investigate background characteristics and risk factors in the sleeping environment associated with sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and compare the prevalence with previous English SIDS case-control studies.
Cohort of SIDS in 2020 compared with a combined analysis of two case-control studies conducted in 1993-1996 and 2003-2006.
England, UK PARTICIPANTS: 138 SIDS deaths in 2020 compared with 402 SIDS deaths and 1387 age-equivalent surviving controls, combined from previous studies.
The increased vulnerability of SIDS infants identified in previous studies has become more marked. The infants who died in 2020 were younger (median=66 days (IQR: 34-118) vs 86 days (IQR: 52-148), p=0.003) with an increased prevalence of low birth weight (30.5% vs 21.6%, p=0.04) and preterm births (29.6% vs 19.3%, p=0.012). The excess of socioeconomically deprived families, male infants and high levels of maternal smoking during pregnancy were still evident. Among recent deaths, fewer infants were put down or found on their side; however, there was no significant change in the proportion of infants who were put down (15.6% vs 14.6%, p=0.81) and found prone (40.4% vs 35.3%, p=0.37), despite population wide risk reduction advice over three decades. The proportional increase observed in 2003-2006 of half the deaths occurring while sleeping next to an adult was maintained in 2020, and for the vast majority (90%), this was in hazardous circumstances (adult had consumed alcohol, smoked, slept on a sofa, or the infant was premature or low birth weight and less than 3 months old). More deaths also occurred when there was a disruption in infant care routine compared with previous observations (52.6% vs 20.7%, p<0.001).
A more targeted approach is needed with vulnerable families emphasising the importance of sleeping infants on their back and proactive planning infant sleep when there are disruptions to the normal routine, in particular to avoid hazardous co-sleeping.
利用国家儿童死亡率数据库,本研究旨在调查与婴儿猝死综合征(SIDS)相关的睡眠环境中的背景特征和危险因素,并将其流行率与之前的英文 SIDS 病例对照研究进行比较。
2020 年 SIDS 队列与 1993-1996 年和 2003-2006 年进行的两项病例对照研究的综合分析进行比较。
英国,英格兰
2020 年 138 例 SIDS 死亡与之前研究中合并的 402 例 SIDS 死亡和 1387 例年龄匹配存活对照。
之前研究中确定的 SIDS 婴儿的脆弱性变得更加明显。2020 年死亡的婴儿年龄更小(中位数=66 天(IQR:34-118)比 86 天(IQR:52-148),p=0.003),低出生体重(30.5%比 21.6%,p=0.04)和早产(29.6%比 19.3%,p=0.012)的发生率更高。社会经济贫困家庭、男性婴儿和孕妇怀孕期间大量吸烟的比例仍然明显。在最近的死亡中,侧卧或俯卧的婴儿数量减少;然而,仰卧放置的婴儿比例(15.6%比 14.6%,p=0.81)和俯卧放置的婴儿比例(40.4%比 35.3%,p=0.37)并没有显著变化,尽管三十年来一直在进行广泛的降低风险的公众宣传。2003-2006 年期间,有一半的死亡发生在与成人同睡的情况下,这种比例的增加在 2020 年仍保持不变,而且对于绝大多数(90%),这种情况是在危险情况下(成人饮酒、吸烟、睡在沙发上,或者婴儿早产、低出生体重且不到 3 个月大)。与之前的观察结果相比,当婴儿护理常规受到干扰时,死亡也更多(52.6%比 20.7%,p<0.001)。
需要对弱势群体家庭采取更有针对性的方法,强调让婴儿仰卧睡眠的重要性,并在婴儿护理常规受到干扰时积极规划婴儿睡眠,特别是要避免危险的同睡。