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Copyright © 2013 Society of Trauma Nurses. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. Copyright © 2013 Society of Trauma Nurses. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited.
RESEARCH
ABSTRACT
Accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed is a leading
cause of preventable infant death. Bed sharing, teen
motherhood, and Hispanic ethnicity have been associated
with infant sleep suffocation death. Fifty-five Hispanic teen
mothers were surveyed regarding acculturation/demographic
characteristics and their infants’ sleep behaviors. Most
participants had 2 foreign-born parents from Latin America.
Participants with 2 US-born parents were less likely to bed
share than their less-acculturated peers. Many participants
reported not always placing their infant in a supine sleep
position. There is a significant need to reach out to Hispanic
teen mothers, particularly from newer immigrant families,
with culturally and linguistically appropriate multigenerational
clinical messaging on the risks of infant bed sharing and
nonsupine sleep positioning.
Key Words
Hispanic teens, Safe sleep education, SIDS, Sleep
suffocation, SUIDS, Teen mothers
Author Affiliations: Dell Children’s Medical Center of Central Texas,
Trauma Services, Austin (Mss Duzinski and Brown and Drs Barczyk and
Lawson); University of Texas School of Social Work, Austin (Ms Yuma-
Guerrero); University of Texas School of Public Health–Austin Campus
(Ms Fung); and SafeKids Worldwide, Washington, DC (Ms Wheeler).
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Correspondence: Sarah V. Duzinski, MPH, Dell Children’s Medical Center
of Central Texas, Trauma Services, 4900 Mueller Blvd, Austin, TX 78723
(svduzinski@seton.org).
Sleep Behaviors of Infants and Young Children
Associated Demographic and Acculturation Characteristics Among Hispanic Teen Mothers
Sarah V. Duzinski, MPH ■ Paula J. Yuma-Guerrero, MPH ■ Adrienne Fung, BS ■ Juliette M. Brown, MHS ■
Tareka Wheeler, BA ■ Amanda N. Barczyk, PhD, MSW ■ Karla A. Lawson, PhD, MPH
when an infant suffocates in soft or excessive bedding,
is rolled on or overlaid by another person, is wedged or
entrapped between objects such as a mattress and wall or
couch cushions, or is asphyxiated by strangulation, such
as from a cord located near the sleep area.
4
Each year,
almost 400 infant deaths are now classified as ASSB.
5,6
From 1984 to 2004, ASSB rates in the United States have
quadrupled from 2.8 to 12.5 deaths per 100,000.
3
The rea-
son for this increase is not fully understood. However,
researchers suspect that an increase in infant bed shar-
ing behaviors combined with more precise classification
of SUIDS, SIDS, and ASSB deaths because of improved
death scene investigation may be at play.
2-4,7
Infant deaths
formerly thought to be inexplicable (and thus classified as
SIDS) may now be more readily recognized and classified
as ASSB.
2,3
This rise in ASSB has underscored the need for
infant sleep death prevention.
Research has highlighted a number of risk factors asso-
ciated with infant sleep death. Accidental suffocation and
strangulation in bed disproportionately impacts infants
younger than 1 year and is commonly associated with
infant sleep practices.
8-10
Sleep practices linked to ASSB
among infants and toddlers include sleeping prone (face
down), bed sharing with other children or adults, and
the presence of soft bedding and items such as stuffed
animals in the sleep space.
9,11
The American Academy
of Pediatrics now recommends that infants and toddlers
avoid bed sharing with parents in an adult bed and sleep
in a supine position, on a firm mattress, and free of excess
and soft bedding and toys to lessen the risk of prevent-
able sleep-related infant deaths.
2
Many maternal risk factors associated with ASSB have
also been identified. Infants of teen mothers are at par-
ticular risk for ASSB death. Lower socioeconomic status,
unmarried status of mother, younger maternal age at time
of birth ( <20 years), and lower maternal educational at-
tainment ( <12 years) are linked to sleep-related infant
death.
12,13
In addition, factors shown to be associated
with teen motherhood such as social isolation, lack of
social support, and family disorganization and conflict
also place infants and children at increased unintentional
injury risk.
14
Infants of teen mothers are of special concern in Cen-
tral Texas. Texas ranks among the top 3 US states for teen DOI: 10.1097/JTN.0000000000000011
S
leep-related injury death in infants has emerged as a
significant health problem in the United States. Sud-
den unexpected infant death (SUIDS) can include
any deaths attributed to accidental suffocation and
strangulation in bed (ASSB), hypo- or hyperther-
mia, poisoning, ingestions, infections, metabolic diseases,
trauma (accidental or nonaccidental), and sudden infant
death syndrome (SIDS).
1,2
Accidental suffocation and
strangulation in bed is the leading mechanism of unin-
tentional injury-related infant death in the United States.
1,3
Accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed can occur