Breastfeeding Is Associated with a Lower Risk of SIDS
According to The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine
10/14/2005
2:26:00 PM EST - Contrary to even the
recommendations of its own Section on Breastfeeding, the
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
released an ill-advised and ill-informed statement from its Task
Force on SIDS (1) (sudden infant death
syndrome). Recommendations that advise against parent-infant
bed-sharing and support the generic
use of pacifiers imply a "truly astounding triumph of
ethnocentric assumptions over common sense and
medical research," according to Nancy Wight, M.D.,
president of The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine.
These
controversies, and many more, will be addressed in the upcoming,
new peer-reviewed journal
Breastfeeding Medicine
www.liebertpub.com/bfm, the Official Journal of the Academy
of Breastfeeding Medicine
www.brmed.org.
Current research
from the CDC (2), as well as AAP's existing policy statement on
Breastfeeding and the Use of Human
Milk (3), note that breastfeeding is associated with a lower
risk of SIDS. Since 1992, SIDS has
decreased as both co-sleeping and breastfeeding have increased.
Sleeping near one's baby or in the same
room has been shown to reduce the risks of SIDS and more
broadly promote maternal and child health by
facilitating breastfeeding. As exclusively breastfed
infants feed frequently through the night, breastfeeding is
thought to reduce SIDS by the same proposed mechanism as
supine sleep and pacifiers, namely less deep
sleep and frequent brief awakenings. Breastfed babies do
not need artificial pacifiers to get stimulation since
they already have the protective effect of suckling during the
night.
Pacifiers have
been associated with increased risk of ear infections, later
dental problems, and reduced
breastfeeding. As reduced breastfeeding increases infant
mortality from infectious disease and several other
causes, we agree with the AAP that a pacifier should not
be introduced until breastfeeding is well established
and never forced on an infant. Pacifiers would only be of
possible benefit to infants lacking in the natural
opportunity of night-time suckling (breastfeeding).
Extensive research on infant sleep has revealed that infants are
frequently aroused to lighter stages of sleep by
parental movement when co-sleeping. Dr. James J. McKenna
of the University of Notre Dame was a consultant
to the AAP on the new policy, but disagrees strongly with
their conclusions.(4) Dr. McKenna points out that
there are many forms of co-sleeping and that
recommendations for SAFE co-sleeping need to be publicized.
Co-sleeping is
defined as sleeping in close proximity to one's infant, which
can include but does not necessarily
imply being in the same bed. Infants should never co-sleep with
other siblings, with smoking or substanceabusing
parents, on sofas or waterbeds, with soft bedding
materials, or adjacent to spaces that could trap the
infant. As with sleeping in a crib, infants should be
placed on their backs, with only a thin blanket on a firm
bedding surface.
The Academy of
Breastfeeding Medicine (ABM) is a worldwide organization of
physicians dedicated to the promotion,
protection and support of breastfeeding and human lactation
through education, research and
advocacy. For evidence-based recommendations regarding
co-sleeping and breastfeeding, see Protocol #6 on
our website
www.bfmed.org.
Mary Ann Liebert,
Inc. is a privately held, fully integrated media company known
for establishing authoritative
peer-reviewed journals in many promising areas of science and
biomedical research, including Journal of
Breastfeeding Medicine, Journal of Women's Health,
Obesity Management, and Disease Management. Its
biotechnology trade magazine, Genetic Engineering News
(GEN), was the first in its field and is today the
industry's most widely read publication worldwide. A
complete list of the firm's 60 journals, books, and
newsletters is available at
www.liebertpub.com.
1. AAP Task Force
on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. The Changing Concept of Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome: Diagnostic
Coding Shifts, Controversies Regarding Sleeping Environment, and
New Variables to Consider in Reducing
Risk. Pediatrics November 2005; 116(5):1245-1255
2. American Academy of Pediatrics, Section on Breastfeeding,
Policy Statement: Breastfeeding and the Use of
Human Milk. Pediatrics 2005; 115(2):496-506
3. Chen A, Rogan WJ. Breastfeeding and the Risk of Postneonatal
Death in the United States. Pediatrics 2004;
113:e435-439 URL:
http://www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/113/5/e435
4. McKenna JJ, McDade T. Why babies should never sleep alone: A
Review of the co-sleeping controversy in
relation to SIDS, bedsharing and breast feeding.
Pediatric Respiratory Reviews 2005; 6:134-152 (available on
line at
www.sciencedirect.com)
CONTACT:
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., Larchmont Karla Shepard Rubinger,
914-740-2100 ext. 2153
krubinger@liebertpub.com
Academy of
Breastfeeding Medicine Nancy E. Wight, MD (Neonatology),
619-222-0442 Fax: 619-222-0443 Pager:
858-493-0198 wightsd@aol.com
www.bfmed.org
University of
Notre Dame Professor of Anthropology
James J. McKenna, Ph.D.
James.J.McKenna.25@nd.edu