Lambert Becky, Keegan Alice-Amber, Ingram Jenny, Blair Peter S, Fleming Peter J, Pease Anna
Centre for Academic Child Health, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Centre for Academic Child Health, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
BMJ Paediatr Open. 2025 Jul 24;9(1):e003620. doi: 10.1136/bmjpo-2025-003620.
Safer sleep messages have reduced the rates of sudden unexpected deaths in infancy by 90% in England since 1990. However, deaths continue, mainly in deprived families or where unsafe sleep practices remain common. Understanding the factors influencing these decisions can help further reduce these deaths. This study explores what influences infant sleep-related care practices among caregivers of at-risk infants and those who report non-adherence to safer sleep advice.
A previously collected survey of infant care practices allowed the identification of 'high scorers' based on a calculated risk score determined by background characteristics and those reporting risky behaviours as 'risky sleepers'. Semistructured telephone/online interviews took place from August to December 2022. Reflexive thematic analysis identified key themes.
Twenty-nine interviews were conducted with 28 families, with 14 'high scorers' and 15 'risky sleepers'. The key themes were trustworthy sources, interpretation of risk and desperate times call for desperate measures. Caregivers of high-risk infants generally understood and followed safer sleep guidance but described rare occasions of compromised safety, usually due to routine disruptions. Those engaging in risky sleep practices cited factors such as sleep deprivation, past experiences, self-identity and personal interpretations of safer sleep advice as influential.
Safer sleep messages are reaching families, but targeted support is needed to prevent rare but fatal incidents. Health professionals should consistently discuss co-sleeping using improved communication strategies to enhance trust. Co-created, accessible and bitesize resources should support parents in problem-solving and planning for safer sleep during disruption to routines.
自1990年以来,英国关于安全睡眠的宣传使婴儿意外猝死率降低了90%。然而,此类死亡仍在发生,主要集中在贫困家庭或不安全睡眠习惯仍然普遍的家庭。了解影响这些决策的因素有助于进一步减少此类死亡。本研究探讨了哪些因素影响了高危婴儿的照料者以及那些报告未遵循安全睡眠建议的人的婴儿睡眠相关护理行为。
先前收集的一项关于婴儿护理行为的调查,根据由背景特征和报告危险行为的情况所确定的计算风险评分,识别出“高分者”,并将那些报告危险行为的人视为“危险睡眠者”。2022年8月至12月进行了半结构化电话/在线访谈。反思性主题分析确定了关键主题。
对28个家庭进行了29次访谈,其中有14名“高分者”和15名“危险睡眠者”。关键主题包括可靠信息源、风险解读以及危急时刻需采取非常措施。高危婴儿的照料者通常理解并遵循安全睡眠指导,但描述了一些安全受到影响的罕见情况,通常是由于日常安排被打乱。那些有危险睡眠行为的人列举了诸如睡眠不足、过往经历、自我认知以及对安全睡眠建议的个人解读等因素作为影响因素。
关于安全睡眠的宣传已传达给家庭,但仍需要有针对性的支持,以防止罕见但致命的事件发生。卫生专业人员应持续使用改进的沟通策略来讨论同床睡眠问题,以增强信任。共同创建、易于获取且简短实用的资源应帮助父母解决问题,并在日常安排被打乱时规划更安全的睡眠。