Stephanie Anne Deutsch, Claire E Loiselle, Jobayer Hossain, Allan De Jong
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: To characterize social factors associated with sudden unexpected infant death (SUID), we examined distribution of social factors across infant race, ethnicity, cause of death (medical, injury-related, unknown) and investigator-derived death grouping utilizing a multi-jurisdictional case registry.
Methods: Retrospective analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention SUID and Sudden Death in the Young Case Registry for infant deaths occurring 2015-2020, including child death review team-compiled clinical and investigative information RESULTS: Of 2212 infants who experienced SUID, social factors including caregiver criminal history, substance use, and intimate partner violence were associated with lower odds of medical cause of death versus other causes. Over one-third (n=226, 36%) of infants with injury-related deaths had caregivers with substance use concerns; caregiver substance use was common among SUID overall (n=753, 34%). Utilizing an investigator-derived schema, both injury-related deaths and undetermined deaths were grouped together and social factors compared across that cohort versus deaths from medical causes; no statistically significant differences in social factors were identified across groups.
Conclusion: Utilizing a multi-jurisdictional registry, relationships between social factors and cause of death among infants experiencing SUID were identified; social factors (caregiver criminal history, substance use, intimate partner violence) were associated with lower odds of medical cause of death versus other causes. Distribution of social factors among infants experiencing SUID may contribute to emerging disparities and requires further study; efforts are needed to improve social factor data quality. SUID prevention efforts should address impact of social factors on fatality vulnerability and advocacy for social policy change.
期刊介绍:
Academic Pediatrics, the official journal of the Academic Pediatric Association, is a peer-reviewed publication whose purpose is to strengthen the research and educational base of academic general pediatrics. The journal provides leadership in pediatric education, research, patient care and advocacy. Content areas include pediatric education, emergency medicine, injury, abuse, behavioral pediatrics, holistic medicine, child health services and health policy,and the environment. The journal provides an active forum for the presentation of pediatric educational research in diverse settings, involving medical students, residents, fellows, and practicing professionals. The journal also emphasizes important research relating to the quality of child health care, health care policy, and the organization of child health services. It also includes systematic reviews of primary care interventions and important methodologic papers to aid research in child health and education.