SIDS New Zealand

  • Home
  • News
  • Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
  • Family Stories
  • About SIDS NZ
  • Donate
  • Links
  • Contact Us

SIDS News

  • Parents and Carers
    • Back is Best
    • Cot Safety
    • Monitors
    • Reducing the Risks
    • Tummy Time
    • What is SIDS?
  • Bereaved Parents
    • A Child's Funeral
    • Children's Grief
    • Dealing With Grief
    • Helping Siblings
    • Recommended Books
    • Videos
    • What is SIDS?
  • Grandparents
    • Alliance of Grandparents, A Support in Tragedy
    • Effective Comforting
    • Grieving and Supporting
    • What is SIDS?
  • Friends and Whanau
    • Effective Comforting
    • Offering Support
    • Other Family Members
    • Practical Matters and Decision Making
    • What is SIDS?
  • Health Professionals
    • Facts and Figures
    • General Practictitioners
    • Impact

News

  • Return to SIDS News

Archive: May 2008

Car Seat Inserts Keep Baby Breathing

Thu 01 May 2008

Babies travelling in car seats should be provided with additional support to prevent blocking of their airway, research suggests.

A research team from The University of Auckland, Auckland Hospital and the New Zealand Cot Death Association found that breathing problems were significantly reduced when young infants were placed in a car safety seat with a foam insert in it, designed to help the infant’s head to lie upright in a natural position instead of slumping forward.

The research team have worked with Dunlop Foams to develop the foam insert which holds the infant’s body forward with a slot for the protruding back of the head. This allows the head to lie upright even when the baby falls asleep, keeping the baby’s airway open. The insert was designed to protect infants until they are about nine months old, when infants’ jaws become stable.

“Car seats are absolutely necessary for the safety of all small children, but the seat should be made as safe as possible for very young children,” says Dr Shirley Tonkin of the NZ Cot Death Association. “We reported last year in the British Medical Journal that some healthy full term babies had severe stop breathing attacks while they were sleeping in their car seats. By using a foam insert that allows the infant’s head to sit upright, the airway is kept open and the baby is kept safe. A side benefit is that babies seem to sleep more comfortably, but babies should still not be left to sleep unattended.”

“Babies are not shaped like little adults,” says Professor Alistair Gunn of the University’s Departments of Physiology and Paediatrics. “Young babies have relatively much bigger heads than adults and they stick out behind the line of the back. At the same time they have very short necks so that their chins are almost on their chests, and their muscles are less well developed. Because standard infant car seats have flat backs, when an infant is properly strapped in place, the flat back of the seat pushes on the back of the head, which is bent forward, so that the chin is pressed against the chest. Because babies have very mobile jaws, the chin is easily pushed backward, with tongue inside it constricting the airway.”

This study, funded by the H.B.Williams Turanga Trust, monitored healthy full-term babies for 30 minutes restrained in a car seat with the foam insert and 30 minutes without the insert. The infants were monitored for breathing and heart rate, nasal airflow and blood oxygen levels. The research found use of the insert reduced the number of breathing problems. The results are published in the medical journal Acta Paediatrica.

The research team is looking to start a new study, funded by the Auckland Medical Research Foundation and the National Child Health Research Foundation, monitoring babies over a longer period of time to see if sleeping in a car seat over the equivalent of a long car journey (around three hours) produces the same problems as shorter periods and if the insert remains effective over these longer periods. The research team is looking for volunteers with healthy, full term babies between 5 and 10 days of age. For more information, contact Dr Christine McIntosh on 021 105 3144.

The Dunlop Foams Happi car seat inserts are available from Baby Factory and Para Rubber stores across New Zealand. The inserts are available in two styles, one for car “capsules” and one for car seats.

Contact

Emma Timewell, Communications Adviser Ph: 09 373 7599 ext 83258 Email:

Professor Alistair Jan Gunn Ph: 09 373 7599 ext 86763 Email:

Dr Shirley Tonkin, New Zealand Cot Death Association Ph: 09 520 3551

Search the SIDS NZ website

Search SIDS NZ


  • RSS Feeds
  • Site Map
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy Policy

footerYMedia.gifclick here to go to the forumsponsorsSovereignSunshine.gifVisit the Shop

Our sponsors

  • United Way
  • Telecom NZ
  • Save Mart
  • Counties Tax
  • Working for Families
  • Fuji Xerox
  • TechSoup
  • The Southern Trust
  • Microsoft
  • NZ Community Post
  • BP
  • First Sovereign Trust
  • Choptober

If you are interested in becoming one of our corporate sponsors, please feel free to contact us. All donations are greatly appreciated.

click here to donate

click here to donate using your payroll

Signup to our upcoming newsletter

Type your e-mail address into the box and click Submit


Click here to sign up as a SIDS member


We belong to the following groups

coalitionsInternationalStillbirthAlliance.gifcoalitionsISPID2010.gif
© Copyright SIDS New Zealand Incorporated 2008 unless otherwise stated.