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Ivan Korolev's avatar

If I may add my two cents on a related subject... When our first baby was born, I was determined to stick to the AAP's recommendations (sleep on the back in a separate bed). But our son didn't sleep particularly well, and my wife had to get up every couple of hours to feed him.

Then we started co-sleeping (awful! terrible!), and things got much better. No more waking up at night. Did the same with our second, now doing the same with our third.

Now, AAP says that co-sleeping is dangerous and awful. But, if one looks at the data, Japan has one of the highest (if not THE highest) co-sleeping rates in the world, and it also has THE lowest SIDS rate. One may wonder, how is this possible if co-sleeping is as unsafe as AAP claims?

Maybe there are other factors at play, such as smoking, alcohol, obesity, etc. Japan is very different from the US along these dimensions.

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Cagdas Dirik's avatar

This article struck a chord with me. When our first kid was born we were very overwhelmed with constant bombardment about SIDS which did not make any sense. Until we found a series of research papers from New Zealand/Australia which made sense - that the common cause of SIDS was the chemical we spray on baby mattresses as fire retardant. The chemicals are on the surface of the mattress and babies need to be on their back so that they don't breathe them in. Then we could make sense of this SIDS fearmongering and did not look back. Our kids (3) slept in whatever position they drifted into sweet dreams and we were (in my opinion) able to give them above average sleeping habits.

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