Klonoff-Cohen H S, Edelstein S L
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92037-0607.
JAMA. 1995 Mar 8;273(10):790-4.
To investigate whether infants who died of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) were routinely placed in different sleep positions compared with healthy infants in a multiethnic diverse population in the United States.
A population-based case-control study.
Five counties in Southern California including Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, Riverside, and San Diego.
Parents of 200 white, African-American, Hispanic, and Asian infants who died of SIDS between January 1989 and December 1992 and parents of 200 healthy, living infants matched on the basis of birth hospital, birth date, race, and gender. Information was obtained from detailed telephone interviews with the parents and validated with obstetric and pediatric records.
Routine sleep position, type of bedding, and objects in bed were determined for both case and control infants, while the last-placed and found sleep and face positions at death were reported for SIDS infants.
Approximately 66% of SIDS infants and 64% of comparison infants routinely slept on their abdomens (P = .91). At the time of death, 80% of cases were found sleeping on their abdomens. There was no difference in routine sleep position for SIDS infants and comparison infants (odds ratio = 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.42 to 1.38), while simultaneously adjusting for birth weight (in grams), medical conditions at birth, breast-feeding, passive smoking, maternal recreational drug use, prenatal care, and infant vomiting. Hispanic parents routinely placed their infants on their abdomens less frequently than white parents (P < .01). However, the prone sleep position (face down) was the most commonly found sleep position at death in both Hispanic and non-Hispanic infants.
Routine prone sleep position was not associated with an increased risk of SIDS in this study population. The results need to be confirmed with other parents of SIDS infants interviewed before the height of publicity regarding prone sleep position in the United States.
调查在美国一个多民族多样化人群中,死于婴儿猝死综合征(SIDS)的婴儿与健康婴儿在常规睡眠姿势上是否存在差异。
一项基于人群的病例对照研究。
南加州的五个县,包括洛杉矶、奥兰治、圣贝纳迪诺、里弗赛德和圣地亚哥。
1989年1月至1992年12月期间死于SIDS的200名白人、非裔美国人、西班牙裔和亚裔婴儿的父母,以及200名健康存活婴儿的父母,这些健康婴儿在出生医院、出生日期、种族和性别方面进行了匹配。通过与父母进行详细的电话访谈获取信息,并与产科和儿科记录进行核对。
确定病例组和对照组婴儿的常规睡眠姿势、床上用品类型和床上物品,同时报告SIDS婴儿死亡时最后摆放的睡眠姿势和发现时的睡眠及面部姿势。
约66%的SIDS婴儿和64%的对照婴儿常规趴着睡(P = 0.91)。死亡时,80%的病例被发现趴着睡。SIDS婴儿和对照婴儿在常规睡眠姿势上没有差异(优势比 = 0.76;95%置信区间,0.42至1.38),同时对出生体重(克)、出生时的医疗状况、母乳喂养、被动吸烟、母亲使用消遣性药物、产前护理和婴儿呕吐进行了调整。西班牙裔父母将婴儿常规趴着睡的频率低于白人父母(P < 0.01)。然而,无论是西班牙裔还是非西班牙裔婴儿,俯卧睡眠姿势(脸朝下)都是死亡时最常见的睡眠姿势。
在本研究人群中,常规俯卧睡眠姿势与SIDS风险增加无关。在美国关于俯卧睡眠姿势的宣传高峰期之前,需要对其他SIDS婴儿的父母进行访谈以证实这些结果。