PEDIATRICS Vol. 104 No. 5 November 1999, p. e58
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
The Effect of the Weekend on the Risk of Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome
Received Jan 15, 1999; accepted May 18, 1999.
From the * Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Objective. The risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is associated strongly with socioeconomic status. However, many infants who live in one socioeconomic environment, with its attendant level of risk of SIDS over the weekend, often are exposed to a different level of risk during the work week (because of day care for the infant). If the association between SIDS and socioeconomic status acts through the quality of supervision of the infant, then there could be an immediate change in the level of risk as the infant moves from home to outside care to home again. In this scenario, infants of economically disadvantaged parents would have a higher risk of SIDS over the weekend than they do during the week. On the other hand, infants of economically advantaged parents would be at lower risk over the weekend. Therefore, the relative risk of SIDS associated with the weekend (risk over the weekend vs risk during the work week) should be found to decrease as the number of years of maternal education (a surrogate for socioeconomic status) increases. Testing this prediction is the objective of the study.
Methodology. Instances of SIDS in the postneonatal period
(28-364 days) among the cohort of all infants born in the United
States between January 1989 and December 1991 were analyzed. The number
798.0, taken from the International Classification of
Diseases, was used to identify 14 996 cases of SIDS. Deaths among hospital patients were distinguished from all other
deaths. The latter were divided into four categories: 1) death occurred
in the emergency department; 2) the infant was dead on arrival at the
emergency department; 3) death occurred at a residence; and 4) death
occurred at some other place. Maternal education was divided into four
categories: <12, 12, 13 to 15, and
16 years. The weekend ratio was
defined as the ratio of SIDS cases on Saturday and Sunday (times 5) and
Monday through Friday (times 2). The predicted trend in this
ratio by maternal education was tested by applying a
2
test-for-trend.
Results. The overall weekend ratio was 1.00, indicating
that the risk of SIDS was no higher over the weekend than it was Monday
through Friday. However, for infants of mothers with <12 years of
education, the ratio was 1.13. For infants of mothers with
16 years
of education, it was 0.55. The trend in the ratio as maternal education
increased (1.13, 0.99, 0.86, and 0.55) was highly significant
(
2 = 74.2; 1 degree of freedom). Each of the
four ratios, with the exception of 0.99, was significantly different
from 1.00 (z = 3.74, 2.45, and 6.09, respectively). The ratios for
infants of mothers with 13 to 15 and
16 years of education also were
significantly different from each other (z = 4.57). For all causes of death combined (including the relatively small number
of SIDS cases) among hospital inpatients, there was no significant
trend in the weekend ratio as the level of maternal education
increased. However, among deaths not attributable to SIDS or accidents
occurring outside the hospital, there was a slight but significant
declining trend (
2 = 8.4; 1 degree of freedom) The
risk of an accidental death was highest over the weekend for all four
maternal education categories. On an average working day, the risk of SIDS among offspring of mothers
with <12 years of education was found to be 3.9 times greater than
that among offspring of mothers with
16 years of education. At the
weekend, the relative risk increased to 7.9. A plot of the weekend ratio against single years of maternal education
revealed a unimodal distribution with a peak at 11 years.
Conclusions. First, the results of the study are
consistent with the level of risk of SIDS, changing promptly toward the
risk level obtained in the baby's new environment. Variability in the
observation of unusual respiratory events seems the most likely
explanation. It is unlikely that confounding factors played a role in
the results for tertiary-educated mothers. Alternative explanations,
such as less attentive maternal supervision or less regularity in the baby's routine over the weekend, could explain logically the result for infants of mothers with <12 years of education. But for infants of
mothers with
16 years of education the opposite would have to be
proposed.Second, the absence of an overall weekend ratio >1.00 is comparable
with the minority of previous reports. The overall ratio is >1.00 when
SIDS cases occurring in a hospital setting are excluded. This probably
is explained by the fact that care providers over the weekend are less
likely to seek outside help because of their restricted (perceived or
real) access to medical care.
Key words:
child care,
day care
centers for children,
death certificates,
education,
maternal behavior,
sudden infant death.
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