sudden infant death syndrome a re-examination of temporal trends婴儿猝死综合症的复审时间趋势.pdf
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Lisonkova et al. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 2012, 12:59
/1471-2393/12/59
RESEARCH ARTICLE Open Access
Sudden infant death syndrome: a re-examination
of temporal trends
Sarka Lisonkova1*, Jennifer A Hutcheon1 and KS Joseph1,2
Abstract
Background: While the reduction in infants’ prone sleeping has led to a temporal decline in Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome (SIDS), some aspects of this trend remain unexplained. We assessed whether changes in the gestational
age distribution of births also contributed to the temporal reduction in SIDS.
Methods: SIDS patterns among singleton and twin births in the United States were analysed in 1995–96 and 2004–
05. The temporal reduction in SIDS was partitioned using the Kitagawa decomposition method into reductions due
to changes in the gestational age distribution and reductions due to changes in gestational age-specific SIDS rates.
Both the traditional and the fetuses-at-risk models were used.
Results: SIDS rates declined with increasing gestation under the traditional perinatal model. Rates were higher at
early gestation among singletons compared with twins, while the reverse was true at later gestation. Under the
fetuses-at-risk model, SIDS rates increased with increasing gestation and twins had higher rates of SIDS than
singletons at all gestational ages. Between 1995–96 and 2004–05, SIDS declined from 8.3 to 5.6 per 10,000 live
births among singletons and from 14.2 to 10.6 per 10,000 live births among twins. Decomposition using the
traditional model showed that the SIDS reduction among singletons and twins was entirely due to changes in the
gestational age-specific SIDS rate. The fetuses-at-risk model attributed 45% of the SIDS reduction to changes in the
gestational age distribution and 55% of the reduction to changes in gestational age-specific SIDS rates among
singleto
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