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Arch Dis Child 2003;88:784-788 doi:10.1136/adc.88.9.784
  • Community child health, public health, and epidemiology

Infant care practices related to cot death in Turkish and Moroccan families in the Netherlands

  1. B E van Sleuwen1,
  2. M P L’Hoir1,
  3. A C Engelberts3,
  4. P Westers4,
  5. T W J Schulpen2
  1. 1Department of Medical Psychology of the Division of Paediatrics of the University Medical Centre, The Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital, Utrecht, Netherlands
  2. 2Centre for Migration and Child Health, Division of Paediatrics of the University Medical Centre, The Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital
  3. 3University Hospital Leiden, Department of Paediatrics, Leiden, Netherlands
  4. 4Centre for Biostatistics, University of Utrecht, Netherlands
  1. Correspondence to:
    Mw drs B E van Sleuwen, University Hospital Utrecht/Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital, KA.00.004.0, PO Box 85090, 3508 AB Utrecht, Netherlands;
    B.E.vanSleuwen{at}wkz.azu.nl
  • Accepted 19 December 2002

Abstract

From 1979 to 1993 Turkish infants had a significantly higher cot death risk compared to Dutch infants. In contrast Moroccan infants had a risk of cot death that was approximately three times lower compared to Dutch infants during the same period. This study shows that these differences have disappeared, while differences still exist in infant care practices between these ethnic groups. At 28 well-baby clinics, questionnaires were distributed for this sample selection. The response was 82%. Data were collected on 55 Turkish, 54 Moroccan, and 210 Dutch families.

Less than 7% of these three ethnic groups still placed infants in the prone position. Moroccan mothers hardly smoked. Turkish people used pillows and Moroccan people used soft mattresses more often. Moroccan families practised swaddling more widely. Length of maternal residence influenced some care giving practices. As a result of this study, subgroup specific intervention campaigns for safe sleeping can be developed for Turkish and Moroccan families.

Footnotes

  • * “Sleeping with an open mouth” is termed “mouth breathing”; however, only 50% of infants who sleep with an open mouth are in fact “mouth breathing”; the other 50% still breathe through the nose despite an open mouth, by pressing the tongue to the palate.7

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