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Kids in Adults' Beds

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Kids in Adults' Beds

Children younger than 2 face a greater risk of smothering when sleeping with an adult. By Brian P. McDonough. This audio file plays for 0 minutes and 39 seconds.

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We've all done it: Our child cries and is unable to be consoled, or our toddler walks down the hallway into the bedroom in the middle of the night. It is very difficult to turn down your child's pleas to jump into mommy and daddy's bed. But according to a new report, adult beds are extremely unsafe for children under two. Over an eight year period, from 1990 to 1998, researchers looked at 515 deaths in children under two. One hundred twenty-one of the children died as a result of being smothered accidentally by an adult. Over 394 children died as a result of strangulation or suffocation caused by entrapment of child's head in various structures of the bed.

I am Dr. Brian McDonough.

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More about this Topics

  • Listening to Elderly Parents

  • Talking to Parents About Their Finances

  • Secondhand Smoke

  • Deflate the Pressure

  • Warning Signs That A Senior Needs Help

Other Topics

    • International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia
    • Changing Relationships: You and Your Aging Parent or Relative
    • Guiding Your Family to Greener Living
    • Accepting Aging: Yourself and Others
    • Overcoming Parental Guilt
    • Teens and Depression
    • Helping Family and Friends Understand Alzheimer's Disease
    • Conversation Strategies to Use When Talking With Older Adults (Part 2)
    • Social Apps to Keep Connected in Quarantine
    • Budgeting for New Parents
    • Dads Are Different From Moms