Saturday, November 10, 2012

CHILD DEVELOPMENT AND PUBLIC HEALTH



CHILD DEVELOPMENT AND PUBLIC HEALTH
I chose SIDS as my topic because I have a friend who lost her daughter to SIDS at five months. It was a devastating loss twelve years ago and continues to haunt her today.
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is defined as the sudden death of an infant less than 1 year of age that cannot be explained after a thorough investigation is conducted, including a complete autopsy, examination of the death scene, and review of the clinical history.
SIDS is the leading cause of death among infants aged 1–12 months, and is the third leading cause overall of infant mortality in the United States. The overall rate of SIDS in the United States has declined by more than 50% since 1990. Several reasons for the decrease is advances in newborn care, better nutrition, access to clean water, and widespread immunization. However, there are still some young infants who appear healthy, already gaining weight, learning to shake a rattle and starting to roll over that die un-expectantly in their sleep.
In the United States, about 5,000 babies died of SIDS, the rate in Canada, Great Britain, Australia, and South America experience a rate of 1 infant in every 800. Careful data collection revealed surprising ethnic differences.
 Bangladeshi infants in England are almost always breast-fed, and they sleep surrounded by family members, hearing noises and feeling the comforting touch of their caregivers. They do not sleep deeply for long. But by contrast, their traditional British age-mates slept in their own private spaces, never co-sleeping. Those long periods of lone sleep may contribute to the higher rates of SIDS in white infants. Babies of Asian descent were far less likely than babies of European or African decent to succumb to SIDS.
 In 1994 the Back-to-Sleep campaign was launched to encourage parents to put their children to sleep on their backs to help prevent SIDS.  SIDS rates began to degrease in every nation, especially those where stomach or side sleeping had been the norm.
Following are three websites I have found with information regarding SIDS.
http://www.kidshealth.org/
http://www.sidscenter.org

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Crystal,
I am sorry about your friend's baby. SIDS is a very touching subject for me as well. Two of my sister lost their baby. One child lived to get three weeks old and the other one lived to get one month old. My sisters are still grieving over those two little girls and so am I. Thanks for sharing this great information with your colleagues.