九一星空无限

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New research shows which families are most at risk of cot death

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Wed, 31 Jan 2024, 1:00pm
Dr Fiona Langridge, senior fellow at the University of Auckland’s Department of Paediatrics, said that despite progress in reducing overall Sudi rates in New Zealand, Pacific babies were still over-represented.
Dr Fiona Langridge, senior fellow at the University of Auckland鈥檚 Department of Paediatrics, said that despite progress in reducing overall Sudi rates in New Zealand, Pacific babies were still over-represented.

New research shows which families are most at risk of cot death

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Wed, 31 Jan 2024, 1:00pm

Pacific babies are still听dying in their beds听at much higher rates than any ethnicity听other than M膩ori. New research shows what places Pasifika infants at risk - and what keeps them safe.

Pacific mothers who do not speak English at home or have a regular GP before pregnancy are most likely not to follow safe sleeping practices, potentially putting their babies at risk of cot death.

Poorer households and those who use alternative health practitioners are also less likely to follow the guidelines, which include placing babies on their backs to sleep and using a safe sleeping device.

New Zealand researchers have now published the first comprehensive investigation of infant care practices among Pacific families, which looked at the factors that influence whether a family follows official advice on safe sleeping.

Dr Fiona Langridge, a research fellow at the听University of Auckland鈥檚 Department of Paediatrics, said Pacific babies were still over-represented in rates of听sudden unexpected death in infancy (Sudi), despite a reduction in rates across the general population.

Since 2002, the death rate for Pacific infants was higher than the rate for non-M膩ori and other ethnicities, but lower than for M膩ori. Pacific babies were an estimated six times more likely to die in this way than non-M膩ori, non-Pacific infants.

The provision of safe sleeping devices such as听p膿pi听pods and wahakura听helped to reduce death rates between 2010 and 2015, but rates have since听plateaued听and some datasets indicate rates among M膩ori are rising.

The study,听听this month, used data from the听Growing Up in New Zealand听longitudinal study, in particular interviews with 1100 mothers of Samoan, Tongan, Cook Islands M膩ori and Niuean descent.

It found that about two-thirds of Pacific families followed safe sleeping guidelines. Mothers who were living in larger households and were connected with their culture were more likely to practise the official advice.

Langridge said one of the most persistent findings was that mothers who did not speak English at home were less likely to follow the guidelines.

This could be because the advice was not reaching them; the advice was simply a translation from English that did not take into account cultural differences; or diminished trust in the health system because of past experiences, which could include听racist treatment.

Funded sleeping devices such as p膿pi pods, wahakura, bassinets and costs have helped reduce Sudi rates. However, rates have plateaued since 2015 and may be rising again among some populations. Photo / Mike Scott Funded sleeping devices such as p膿pi pods, wahakura, bassinets and costs have helped reduce Sudi rates. However, rates have plateaued since 2015 and may be rising again among some populations. Photo / Mike Scott

For Pacific families, solitary sleeping was extremely rare. Failing to understand this, or overlooking it, meant that safe sleeping messages risked missing their mark, the researchers said.

The听Herald听reported last week on听the case of Silongo Mafi, who died aged three months in 2020. A coroner found he was living in emergency housing, his parents did not appear to have been advised on safe sleeping, and Silongo had been sharing a bed with his mother on the night he died.

鈥淚t is just a perfect example of a baby鈥檚 mother who is not connected with our system,鈥 said Dr Teuila Percival, a paediatrician and co-author of the study.

鈥淣ot seeing a Well Child provider, not being able to access anything because they鈥檙e in emergency housing. So ... they鈥檙e in a situation where our system doesn鈥檛 work for them.

鈥淲e often fail these mothers and babies because they don鈥檛 speak very good English. They don鈥檛 actually use our system. They鈥檙e not connected with the GP, they don鈥檛 live in a decent house.

鈥淥ur approach has been to tell people what to do, change the behaviour, whereas what we need to do is wrap a lot of things around families, starting with our neighbourhoods.鈥

Some progress is being made at the community level. The researchers pointed to My Baby鈥檚 Village, a collective of community groups and churches dedicated to improving Pasifika health and wellbeing.

Such initiatives needed ongoing support to make sure safe sleeping messages reached a wide audience, the researchers said.

A follow-up study is now underway to investigate culturally appropriate interventions and a communications strategy for reducing the risk of Sudi among Pacific families.

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