Health Behavior Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Messaging Trial to Reduce African-American Infant Mortality
The overall purpose of this randomized trial is to develop and evaluate a systematic approach to improve African-American parental behaviors specifically with regards to the infant sleep environment. African-American parents of newborn, healthy term infants will be randomized to receive either a standard message to avoid bedsharing, eliminate use of soft bedding and soft sleep surfaces, and to place infants in the supine position for sleep to reduce the risk of SIDS or an enhanced message to avoid these behaviors to both reduce the risk of SIDS and to prevent infant suffocation.
A persistent, significant racial disparity exists in infant mortality rates attributable to
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and other types of sleep-related sudden unexpected infant
death (SUID), such as suffocation and undetermined causes of death. SIDS and other
sleep-related deaths account for ~4600 U.S. deaths annually.4 While the incidence of SIDS has
declined, infant deaths from accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed have
quadrupled.5 Additionally, racial disparities in SIDS and other sleep-related deaths have
increased over the past decade, with African-American infants twice as likely to die as other
infants.6, 7 Certain infant sleeping practices, such as prone (stomach) sleeping, use of soft
bedding and soft sleep surfaces, and bedsharing, likely play a significant role, both in SIDS
and SUID, and in the disparities seen therein. Elimination of health barriers and
racial/ethnic disparities, and promoting healthy development, have been highlighted as MCHB
research priorities; this application is directly responsive to both of these priorities.
In the current system, health care providers and public health messages, using the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommendations,8 stress the use of supine (back) positioning,
avoidance of soft bedding, and room sharing without bedsharing as recommendations to reduce
the risk of SIDS. However, our research suggests that African-Americans have problems with
this message, as they have a low degree of self-efficacy with regards to SIDS risk reduction
(i.e., they do not believe that their actions can make a difference in whether SIDS occurs)
and are suspicious of the concept of "risk reduction."2 However, African-American parents
have a high degree of self-efficacy with regards to preventing infant suffocation. Given the
increasing number of suffocation and other preventable sleep-related deaths and the fact that
many of the behavioral risk factors for both SIDS and preventable sleep-related deaths are
the same, providing parents with an additional safe sleep message that emphasizes prevention
of suffocation may be more effective in changing parent behavior. Such a message would be
carefully crafted based on our current community-based research1-3 to address emerging risks
of greatest concern and potential self-efficacy. A simple, easily reproducible change in the
system of newborn care could thus address a critical barrier to further progress in reducing
infant mortality rates, particularly among African American families. The best systems of
care to reduce disparities must use the best available and culturally competent messaging
based on strong empirical evidence and require rigorous evaluation.
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