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October 28, 2016

UVA Experts Help Write New Guidelines for Reducing SIDS

Eric Swensen | Research & Discovery

Baby sleeping with a blanket
UVA pediatricians are part of a team that has issued new, simple recommendations that aim to prevent the heartbreak of SIDS.
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Two University of Virginia Health System physicians helped draft new national recommendations for reducing the risk of sudden infant death syndrome and other sleep-related infant deaths.

UVA Children’s Hospital pediatrician Dr. Rachel Moon served as lead author of the new policy statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics, while UVA colleague Dr. Fern Hauck served as a co-author. The new guidelines have been published online and will appear in the November issue of Pediatrics.

“We want to share this information in a way that doesn’t scare parents, but helps to explain the real risks posed by an unsafe sleep environment,” Moon said. “We know that we can keep a baby safer without spending a lot of money on home-monitoring gadgets but through simple precautionary measures.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines include:

Approximately 3,500 infants die annually in the United States from sleep-related deaths, including SIDS, ill-defined deaths and accidental suffocation and strangulation.

More details on the new guidelines are available at the American Academy of Pediatrics website.