K. Mcculloch et al., Prevalence of SIDS risk factors: Before and after the "Back to Sleep" campaign in North Dakota Caucasian and American Indian infants, CLIN PEDIAT, 39(7), 2000, pp. 403-410
The objective of this study was to compare rates of infant sleeping positio
n and other risk factors fur sudden infant death syndrome from 1991 before
the "Back to Sleep" campaign to rates in 1998 after the campaign. We used a
cross-sectional risk factor prevalence study of risk factors for the years
1991 and 1998, In North Dakota the prevalence rates of prone sleeping decl
ined 72% for American Indian infants and 62% for Caucasian infants. We were
unable to identify a corresponding decline in SIDS in North Dakota for thi
s time period. The relationship between sleeping position and SIDS may be m
ore complex in rural and frontier settings and in American Indian populatio
ns than in urban and majority populations. The generalizability of this stu
dy is limited by the rural setting and small sample size. Longer term surve
illance and additional reports fr-om sites with Pre "Back to Sleep" data as
a baseline for both SIDS rates and sleeping position will be important to
clarify the rate of prone sleeping position and SIDS.