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professional
education
Facts and Figures
Safe Sleep
Education
  Public Health Workers & Social Workers
  First Responders & EMT's
  Childcare Providers & Caregivers
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Sudden Infant Death Network of Ohio
421 Graham Road Ste. H
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
44221



One of the main components of the SID Network’s mission is to educate first responders, medical and health related professionals and infant caregivers on sudden infant death.  Our goal is to provide these professionals with up to date information on SIDS and other sudden unexpected infant death (SUID), safe sleep and risk reduction, scene investigation, research, home visitation and bereavement.

This site will provide you with information and links to other available resources to ensure that you have the most comprehensive knowledge available on sudden infant death.  We also encourage you to review this website’s other pages.  Our sections entitled, About SIDS, Risk Reduction, Grief Support and Links will help you gain an understanding of sudden infant death and important measures all professionals can relay to expectant moms regarding safe sleep.  Our Grief Support page will help you to understand the devastation and heartbreak that families experience after a sudden infant death and ways to help them survive this tragic loss.   If you are interested in professional training by staff from the SID Network of Ohio for public health personnel, first responders or child care providers, please contact us through:




The highlighted areas below will guide you to the information that is most relevant to your profession.


Facts and Figures


SIDS Deaths

Source: Ohio Child Fatality Review, Seventh Annual Report - September 2007, includes reviews of child deaths younger than 18 years which occured in 2005.

Local CFR boards reviewed 57 deaths to children from SIDS in 2005. These deaths represent 3 percent of all 1,725 reviews conducted.  There were greater percentages of SIDS deaths among boys (61 percent) relative to their representation in the general population (51 percent). Ninety-three percent (53) of the SIDS deaths reviewed occurred between 1 and 6 months of age.

Please visit the following links for a complete copy of this report:

Ohio Child Fatality Review - Seventh Annual Report - Part 1

Ohio Child Fatality Review - Seventh Annual Report - Part 2

Ohio Child Fatality Review - Seventh Annual Report - Part 3

 




Safe Sleep

The American Academy of Pediatrics Revises SIDS Risk Reduction Recommendations
“The Changing Concepts of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome:  Diagnostic Coding Shifts,Controversies Regarding the Sleep Environment, and New Variables to Consider in Reducing Risk”
October 10, 2005 by John Kattwinkel, MD






Keep Your Sleeping Baby Safe

To order, please email:



 













Grandparent Brochure
To download:


 

National “Back to Sleep” Campaign






Education

Public Health Nurses and Social Workers
Ohio’s public health nurses have a vital role in the early intervention of a sudden and unexpected infant death.  The public health professionals who provide early intervention, support, counseling, and comfort to the family after the baby’s death have the fundamental job of assisting them through this life-altering experience.

The Ohio Revised Code 313.121 requires public health departments to offer information, counseling and other supportive services to families immediately following notification of a SIDS death.  Although other infant deaths are not specifically detailed in this law, it is hoped that all public health personnel will provide similar services to these bereaved families as well.  The Ohio law regarding the reporting of SIDS and the provision of support to families of SIDS victims can be accessed online at:




For many families the home visit is the cornerstone of bereavement support.  The public health professionals making the home visit are in a unique position to address the family’s needs and  can help alleviate guilt, pain and suffering by providing information in a sensitive manner; explaining autopsy results, providing community resources, and offering guidance for surviving children.  Parents who receive home visits report the visits make a positive impact on the grieving process.

To download the newly revised public health nurse manual which provides health professionals with information and resources to assist families after the sudden, unexpected death of a baby, please click on the link below.

A Guide for the Sudden Infant Death Home Visit
(September 2005)
Produced by: SID Network of Ohio
Funded by: SID Network of Ohio & Ohio Dept. of Health, Bureau of Child and Family Health Services
To download:





Infant Death Home Visit Report
Produced by: Ohio Department of Health - Sudden Infant Death Program
To download:





For additional information:    
The Ohio Department of Health





First Responders and EMT’s

Dealing with a sudden infant death presents both professional and personal challenges for the first responder.  While working to hopefully revive the infant, the EMT may also be faced with consoling the parent or other caregiver, as well as assessing and recording information about the death scene.  Moreover, infants—especially seemingly healthy infants—are not supposed to die.  It is not surprising that local officials and the community pay much more attention to the death of a baby than incidents involving adult fatalities.                                

(National SIDS/Infant Death Resource Center & Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB), Health Resources & Services Administration, US Dept. Health & Human Services)

For an overview of the EMT’s role in responding to a sudden and unexpected infant death, click on the publication below:  
Sudden, Unexpected Infant Death:  Information for the Emergency Medical Technician





Additional resources for first responders follow:
Sudden, Unexplained Infant Death Investigation Reporting Form from the Centers for Disease Control






National SIDS/Infant Death Resource Support Center (NSIDRC)






National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians





Child Care Providers and Care Givers

More and more women today are entering the workforce.  Because of this, more infants and children are entrusted to child care providers and care givers.  The decision of parents to place their child with a particular provider or care giver is a very important one.  All parents want their children to be in a safe environment.

Research suggests that 20% of SIDS deaths throughout the country occur in daycare settings (Moon, Patel and Shaefer, 2000).  Therefore, all child care providers including grandparents and other care givers need to be informed about safe sleep guidelines and encouraged to adopt and practice them.

The following links will guide you to important information regarding safe sleep in the child care setting.

A Child Care Providers Guide to Safe Sleep





Reducing the Risk of SIDS
Training for Child Care Providers






National “Back to Sleep” Campaign






Healthy Child Care America






American Academy of Pediatrics






To arrange a child care training or to answer questions regarding SIDS/OID in child care, contact Barbara Lattur, Executive Director:







©2005 Sudden Infant Death Network of Ohio