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Disclaimer: This fact sheet is for educational use only. Please consult your doctor or other health professional to make sure this information is right for your child.


Safe sleep essentials

Key points to remember
Message to parents
What is SUDI?
How does SUDI happen?
Who is at risk of SUDI?
How can we protect babies from SUDI?
Focus on the face
Safe sleep check
What about tummy time?
What is the SUDI evidence?
Where to go for more information
Acknowledgements
Special copyright notice for this page
Your notes



Disclaimer: This fact sheet is for educational use only. Please consult your doctor or other health professional to make sure this information is right for your child.

Key points to remember

  • every year, about 60 babies die suddenly in their sleep
  • most deaths are preventable
  • safe sleep means face up, face clear, smokefree every time and place a baby sleeps
  • sleeping face up (on the back) protects babies through a critical stage of development
  • a clear face protects babies from suffocation
  • a smokefree start to life makes babies strong

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Message to parents

  • precious new baby?
  • advice from everyone?
  • how do you decide what is essential and what is not?
This fact sheet offers you essential up-to-date information to help keep your baby safe every time and every place they sleep.
 

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What is SUDI?

SUDI stands for sudden, unexpected death in infancy. Some SUDI deaths can be explained (for example, asphyxia or suffocation). Others cannot be (for example, SIDS or cot death). Most happen in the first six months of life when a baby is asleep.
 

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How does SUDI happen?

Babies have a natural drive to breathe. This fails for SUDI babies. They stop breathing in their sleep. Their breathing may stop because of:

  • things in their sleeping environment
  • things that weaken a baby's drive to breathe

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Who is at risk of SUDI?

SUDI risks comes from a set of things that act together:

  • some babies have a weaker drive to breath than others (for example, due to smoking in pregnancy, a low birth weight, being born prematurely or being bottle fed or unwell)
  • some sleeping situations have more hazards than others (for example, from pillows, unsafe positioning, people in the bed, loose covers, soft bedding or unsafe swaddling)

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How can we protect babies from SUDI?

All babies, all places, every sleep
All babies need protecting from SUDI, in all the places they may sleep, and every time they sleep.
 
Safe sleep = face up + face clear + smokefree
Safe sleep cot card
 
See the Safe sleep cot card (at right).
 
Sudden unexpected death is extremely rare for babies protected by this safety formula.
 
Face up
Your baby was designed to sleep face up (on their back). Their drive to breath works best in this position and their airway is also safer. A built-in alarm reminds them to breath, and strong gag and swallow reflexes protect their airway if they spill.
 
Face clear
Your baby was designed to sleep with a clear face. This helps them breathe freely and not get too hot. Your baby may fall asleep with their face clear, but will it stay clear? This will depend on how they lie, where they sleep, and how you make it safe.
 
Smoke free
Your baby was designed to grow and develop smokefree. All smoking harms babies, especially in pregnancy. Smoking takes oxygen and weakens vital systems (such as breathing) as babies develop. When born, such babies need extra protection.
 
If you want to give up smoking, you can:
  • call the Quitline on  0800 778 778  0800 778 778 for free help
  • check out the website Quit/Me Mutu
  • phone the Smokestop help desk on 0508 smokestop (0508 766 537) or use their text, email, bulletin board & chat support 
  • ask your health professional
Other ways to protect your baby from SUDI
 
Your baby was also designed:
  • to need you close by (in the same room as you when you sleep)
  • to be breastfed (this strengthens their drive to breathe)
  • to be handled gently (to protect their brain) (see Preventing shaken baby syndrome on this website)
This is essential care for all babies.
 
See Change for our Children's Six principles for protecting a baby's life (below). It's available in 20 languages.
 
Six principles for protecting a baby's life
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Focus on the face

Sleeping babies need to breathe. Placing babies in unsafe sleeping positions, especially if also propped on pillows, swaddled or wrapped, is dangerous. They may suffocate.
 
What can happen
Too many SUDI babies were placed for sleep on the tummy, or on the side (but rolled forward) or on the back (but propped on pillows). Sadly, many were then found pressed into pillows, underneath bedding, wedged into gaps, with covers over their heads and faces, or under people.
 

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Safe sleep check

Young babies nap and sleep in many places. This safety check is a way to be confident that every sleep is as safe as possible for your baby.
 
1. From the very start, make your baby as strong as possible (less vulnerable)
  • smokefree in pregnancy?
  • born after 36 weeks?
  • weighed more than 2500 gm at birth?
  • breastfed?
Essential: More vulnerable babies need the extra protection of their very own ‘baby bed' (a bed designed for babies) every time they sleep.
 
2. For every sleep, make it as easy as possible for your baby to breath
  • placed for sleep face up (on the back)?
  • plenty of space around your baby's face?
  • in a safe space (no chance of getting onto the tummy, under covers, near pillows or into gaps)?
  • breathes only smoke free air?
3. In every place your baby sleeps, make it as safe as possible.
  • close by you (same room as you when you sleep)?
  • in own ‘baby bed' or own safe space?
  • all possible hazards noticed and removed or avoided?
  • a sober person with your baby if there is alcohol, drugs or partying?
Atawhaitia ahau I roto moemoea
From my earliest beginnings, pursue protection so that I may dream
 

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What about tummy time?

Remember the key messages:
  • back for sleep
  • front for play
  • upright for cuddles and hugs
This will help gravity protect your baby's head shape. (See Positional head-flattening in babies on this website).
 

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What is the SUDI evidence?

Information about SUDI changes as more deaths are explained. Some findings from research are stronger than others. This fact sheet is based on major findings agreed by researchers around the world, and is supported by the findings of coroners.
 

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Where to go for more information

Change for our Children (formerly Education for Change)
Change for our Children is a social innovation company on a mission to build a strong culture of respect for children. Their website offers Baby essentials online, an education programme to prevent sudden unexpected death in New Zealand, and also a range of other project materials.
 
Safe sleep cot cardHealthEd (NZ Ministry of Health)
The HealthEd website houses a searchable catalogue of resources about key public health topics. Health professionals and members of the public can order one or multiple copies of the following Change for our Children resources via this website:
 

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Acknowledgements

Safe sleep essentials leafletStarship Foundation and the Paediatric Society of New Zealand acknowledge the co-operation of Change for our Children  in making this information available for families. The above fact sheet reproduces the content of the Safe sleep essentials leaflet (October 2009), at left, produced by Change for our Children and endorsed by the The Child and Youth Mortality Review Committee, The NZ Ministry of Health and The Office of the Chief Coroner.
 
 
Main reference:
Carpenter, R.G. et al. Lancet 2004; 363:185-91.
 

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Special copyright notice for this page

The copyright notice at the bottom of this page (and all kidshealth pages) does not apply to this fact sheet. Change for our Children holds copyright for all the content of this page. Any requests to reproduce any of the content above need to be made to that organisation.
 

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Your notes

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Endorsement

This fact sheet was endorsed by PSNZ - 13/04/2010

Copyright

Fact sheets are subject to copyright. In the interests of information sharing they may be copied but acknowledgement must be given to PSNZ and Starship Foundation.
© The Paediatric Society of New Zealand and Starship Foundation 2005 - 2012


The Paediatric Society of New Zealand
http://www.paediatrics.org.nz
Starship Foundation
http://www.starship.org.nz

© The Paediatric Society of New Zealand and Starship Foundation 2005 - 2012


The Paediatric Society of New Zealand
http://www.paediatrics.org.nz
Starship Foundation
http://www.starship.org.nz

This fact sheet was printed on: 17-May-2012 10:40pm