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. 2011 Oct;170(10):1281-91.
doi: 10.1007/s00431-011-1433-6. Epub 2011 Mar 15.

Postnatal parental smoking: an important risk factor for SIDS

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Postnatal parental smoking: an important risk factor for SIDS

Germaine Liebrechts-Akkerman et al. Eur J Pediatr. 2011 Oct.

Abstract

Background: Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is the unexpected death of an infant that remains unexplained after a thorough investigation of the circumstances, family history, paediatric investigation and complete autopsy. In Western society, it is the leading cause of post-neonatal death below 1 year of age. In the Netherlands, the SIDS incidence is very low, which offers opportunities to assess the importance of old and new environmental risk factors. For this purpose, cases were collected through pathology departments and the working group on SIDS of the Dutch Paediatrician Foundation. A total of 142 cases were included; these occurred after the parental education on sleeping position (1987), restricted to the international age criteria and had no histological explanation. Age-matched healthy controls (N = 2,841) came from a survey of the Netherlands Paediatric Surveillance Unit, completed between November 2002 and April 2003. A multivariate analysis was performed to determine the risk factors for SIDS, including sleeping position, antenatal maternal smoking, postnatal parental smoking, premature birth, gender, lack of breastfeeding and socio-economic status. Postnatal smoking was identified as an important environmental risk factor for SIDS (OR one parent = 2.5 [1.2, 5.0]; both parents = 5.77 [2.2, 15.5]; maternal = 2.7 [1.0, 6.4]; paternal = 2.4 [1.3, 4.5] ) as was prone sleeping (OR put prone to sleep = 21.5 [10.6, 43.5]; turned prone during sleep = 100 [46, 219]). Premature birth was also significantly associated with SIDS (OR = 2.4 [1.2, 4.8]).

Conclusion: Postnatal parental smoking is currently a major environmental risk factor for SIDS in the Netherlands together with the long-established risk of prone sleeping.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Distribution of cases of SIDS in the Netherlands over the last 25 years with all cases known to the Central Bureau of Statistics of the Netherlands depicted as grey line and the cases included in the present study as black line. Note the decline of SIDS cases according to Central Bureau of Statistics after 1987 when parental education programmes on SIDS acknowledged prone sleeping as a risk factor and the increase of cases collected as part of our study in 1996 when the Dutch National Cot-Death Society was founded and started to collect information

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