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Infant devices can pose asphyxiation hazard

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Communicating risk to caregivers is paramount

It’s very important to bring the dangers highlighted in this study by Batra et al. to light, and that we as pediatricians effectively communicate best practices to families. The study reminds us of the need to be thoughtful and mindful about how we discuss messages about safe sleep to families and to do it in a way that acknowledges the family’s needs, attitudes, and resources. We need to work with families to help them understand best practices so that caregivers can make informed decisions based on the best available evidence as opposed to fear, rumor, or conjecture.

We need to help parents and caregivers realize that infants were not built to be sitting for a long period of time in man-made items that keep them at an upright angle, such as swings, strollers, car seats, and bouncers. These devices are designed for specific uses, and it’s unsafe to allow infants to sleep in them. It may be too strong to say parents should not ever use slings, but caregivers need to be very careful, ensuring that children’s faces are visible, above the edge of the sling and not covered, ensuring a patent airway.

Dr. Benjamin Hoffman

There is a delicate balance to strike in helping parents understand that these devices may be used for their intended purposes under supervision, but that caregivers must remain attentive. Car seats, swings, bouncers, and strollers put a child in a position where gravity can act on the child differently than if the child were laying on a flat surface. The safest place for a baby to sleep is alone, on his or her back, on a firm surface, such as in a crib or bassinet, without any accoutrements that could lead to potential suffocation. Sitting in a bouncer, swing, car seat, or stroller, or lying in a sling, poses a distinct risk, and practitioners should include that message as a part of routine guidance consistent with safe sleep practices as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Dr. Benjamin Hoffman is a general pediatrician and injury prevention specialist at Doernbecher Children’s Hospital at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland. He is member of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Injury, Violence, and Poison Prevention. He reported no relevant financial disclosures.


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS

References

Devices used to carry infants or allow them to play under supervision can pose asphyxiation risks if a baby is left sleeping or unattended in them, according to a recent study.

A retrospective review of deaths reported to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission between 2004 and 2008 investigated the circumstances of 47 deaths of children under age 24 months in car seats, bouncers, swings, strollers, and slings. The study offers more of a case series, not a statistical sample of deaths because no data exist regarding how many infants are placed in these devices or what proportion are injured in them.

“With median elapsed times of 18 and 30 minutes for slings and strollers, respectively, and up to 9 hours for swings, it should be recognized that there may not be a safe amount of time that infants can be left unsupervised in these devices,” reported Dr. Erich K. Batra of Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pa., and his colleagues (J. Pediatr. 2015 April 27 [doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2015.03.044]).

Although head injuries and broken bones have been reported from use of these devices, asphyxiation from suffocation or strangulation was the primary cause of death in all but one of these cases. Among the 31 (66%) cases occurring in car seats, 52% occurred from strangulation from the straps, and the others were positional asphyxia. Five deaths occurred in wearable slings, four in swings, four in bouncers, and three in strollers. Most (89%) car seat deaths occurred outside the car.

“The unfortunate irony is that the mechanism that makes an infant so safe in a car, i.e., buckled straps, may be extremely hazardous when used incorrectly,” Dr. Batra and his associates wrote. Similarly, “caregivers who own slings that do not keep the baby ‘visible and kissable’ at all times should not use those products,” they said.

The mean elapsed time between a child being left by a caregiver in a device and being discovered deceased was 26 minutes in slings (ranging from 10 minutes to 1 hour), 32 minutes in strollers (ranging from 5 minutes to 1 hour), 140 minutes in car seats (ranging from 4 minutes to 11 hours), 150 minutes in bouncers (ranging from 1.5 to 4 hours), and 300 minutes in swings (ranging from 1 to 9 hours).

Among the 27 cases with information on why the child was in the device, 17 infants had been left to sleep in the device.

In accordance with the 2011 American Academy of Pediatrics policy statement on sudden infant death syndrome or SIDS, “sitting devices such as car safety seats, strollers, swings, infant car seats, and infant slings are not recommended for sleeping because of the potential for upper airway obstruction and oxygen desaturation,” Dr. Batra and his associates wrote.

The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

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