Every year in the United States, more than 4,500 infants die suddenly of no immediately obvious cause. Half of these Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths (SUID) are due to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), the leading cause of SUID and of all deaths among infants aged 1-12 months. While the American Academy of Pediatrics'(AAP) Back to Sleep campaign has led to increased supine sleeping and coincided with a dramatic reduction in SIDS since 1994, staggering racial and ethnic disparities have persisted. Child death reviews of SUID have been beneficial in identifying important risk factors to guide prevention efforts. The ultimate goal of this proposed work is to prevent otherwise healthy infants from dying by providing innovative, theory-driven education coupled with easy access to a portable crib, when necessary.
The specific aims of the study are: 1) To evaluate the impact of safe sleep interventions (physician counseling + enhanced health education + crib distribution) on parents'knowledge, beliefs, intentions, skills and practices related to creating and maintaining a safe sleep environment for their infants during the first four months of life;2) To describe the characteristics of physician anticipatory guidance about safe sleep and identify physician, patient and parent characteristics associated with coverage of the topic at the well-child visits;and 3) To evaluate the dissemination of the B'more for Healthy Babies (BHB)'s safe sleep campaign messages and services among our study participants. This 41/2 year study will take place in the Johns Hopkins Harriet Lane Clinic. Methods will include a 3- group randomized controlled trial comparing the safe sleep intervention delivered at the 2-week well-child visit to standard of care and attention matched control groups. Data to be collected include: 1) baseline assessments of parents'safe sleep-related knowledge (including exposure to the BHB campaign), beliefs, intentions, skills and practices;2) audio-recording of physician-parent and health educator-parent interactions and parent-reported assessments of the encounters;and 3) home observations of infant sleep-related practices and environments when the infant is 3-4 weeks and 2-3 months old. Results of this work will advance the application of theory-driven educational and environmental interventions addressing the injury prevention needs of high-risk families. Results will have widespread utility for disseminating effective safe sleep behavior change programs to pediatric clinical care settings serving similar high-risk families.

Public Health Relevance

This proposal will evaluate an innovative, theory-driven health education-based program to increase the proper and consistent use of safe sleep practices and environments for infants. Otherwise healthy infants are needlessly dying simply because of where and how they are placed to sleep by their parents and caregivers. The program will be evaluated in a pediatric well-child clinic and will be compared to standard of care and an attention-matched control condition;audio-recording the pediatrician and health educator counseling and conducting home observations to directly observe sleep offer benefit over most studies on infant safe sleep.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD072821-02
Application #
8723870
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BDCN-N (55))
Program Officer
Willinger, Marian
Project Start
2013-09-01
Project End
2018-04-30
Budget Start
2014-05-01
Budget End
2015-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2014
Total Cost
$579,578
Indirect Cost
$221,814
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Shields, Wendy C; McDonald, Eileen M; Pfisterer, Kaitlin et al. (2015) Scald burns in children under 3?years: an analysis of NEISS narratives to inform a scald burn prevention program. Inj Prev 21:296-300