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SIDS Deaths Rise by 33 Percent on New Year's Day - Study

by Sheela Philomena on Dec 18 2010 2:48 PM

New Year may not be a good start for all, as a new study has found that the number of babies who die of SIDS, or sudden infant death syndrome, increases by 33 percent on New Year's Day.

 SIDS Deaths Rise by 33 Percent on New Year`s Day - Study
New year may not be a good start for all, as a new study has pointed out that number of infants who die of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) shoots by 33 percent on New Year's Day. The possible reason for the above condition is alcohol consumption by caretakers on New Year's Eve.
Led by David Phillips of the University of California, the study documented the dramatic rise in SIDS deaths on New Year's.

Phillips and his co-authors found three types of evidence linking SIDS to alcohol.

In addition to rising, just like alcohol consumption, more on New Year's than at any other day of the year, SIDS and alcohol consumption also increase every weekend.

And the SIDS death rate is abnormally high for children of alcohol-consuming mothers: Babies of mothers who drink are more than twice as likely to die of SIDS.

The study also found a rise in SIDS just after April 20, a counterculture celebration of cannabis, and after July 4, which is also known as an inebriated time, though the rise on neither of these dates is as dramatic as on New Year's.

To see if parental sleeping-in might be at fault - rather than intoxication itself - the authors also checked to see what happens during the autumn shift to daylight savings, when many sleep later because an hour has been added to the day.

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There was no rise in SIDS, said Phillips.

The large datasets contain very little information per case, so "we could not specify the detailed mechanisms and cannot determine whether alcohol is an independent risk factor for SIDS, a risk factor only in conjunction with other factors or a proxy for risks associated with occasions when consumption increases," said Philips.

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"We know that when people are under the influence of alcohol their judgments are impaired and they are not as good at performing tasks. This would include caretaking," said Phillips.

The findings were published in the journal Addiction.

Source-ANI


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