Media Release: LA LECHE
LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL AND CO-SLEEPING EXPERT FIND STUDY TO BE INACCURATE
Contact: Kim Cavaliero, (847)
519-7730 ext. 233, Mary Lofton ext. 271, or Mary Hurt ext. 271
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Schaumburg, IL (September
30, 1999) - La Leche League International (LLLI), the world's foremost
authority on breastfeeding, questioned the results of a recent study
published in the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine which
refers to co-sleeping as an unsafe practice for families.
Studies have shown that co-sleeping
with a breastfeeding infant promotes bonding, regulates the mother and
baby's sleep patterns, plays a role in helping the mother to become
more responsive to her baby's cues, and gives both the mother and baby
needed rest. The co-sleeping environment also assists mothers in the
continuation of breastfeeding on demand, an important step in maintaining
the mother's milk supply.
Dr. James McKenna, Professor
of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, a member of LLLI's
Health Advisory Council, and an expert on the subject of co-sleeping,
believes there to be more danger in leaving an infant alone in a crib
than in arranging a safe co-sleeping environment. He states, "We
agree with the authors and others that special precautions need to be
taken to minimize catastrophic accidents. However, the need for such
precautions is no more an argument against all co-sleeping and, specifically
bedsharing, than is the reality of infants accidentally strangling,
suffocating, or dying from SIDS alone in cribs, a reason to recommend
against all solitary, unsupervised infant sleep." He adds, "While
specific structural hazards of an adult bed are important, the fact
that they exist means neither that they cannot be eliminated nor that
all bed-sharing is unsafe." Dr. McKenna also considers the conclusions
and recommendations of the study to be inappropriate because the authors
based their findings on incomplete and anecdotal evidence rather than
hard scientific data.
Dr. McKenna believes that
co-sleeping can be a positive experience for a breastfeeding family
and should not be considered dangerous if parents institute the following
safeguards:
- Parents should not sleep
with their babies if they are smokers or have ingested alcohol or
drugs.
- Bedding should be tight
fitting to the mattress.
- The mattress should be
tight fitting to the headboard of the bed.
- There should not be any
loose pillows or soft blankets near the baby's face.
- There should not be any
space between the bed and adjoining wall where the baby could roll
and become trapped.
- The baby should not be
placed on its stomach.
La Leche League International
offers mother-to-mother support, education, and information in 66 countries,
and 28 languages, around the world. In addition, LLLI offers a variety
of additional educational programs for medical professionals, as well
as publishing and selling books and magazines about breastfeeding and
parenting. LLLI also maintains an award-winning Web site at www.lalecheleague.org.
Page last edited Sun Oct 14 09:32:37 UTC 2007.