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Erschienen in: Journal of Community Health 2/2016

01.04.2016 | Original Paper

Differences in African–American Maternal Self-Efficacy Regarding Practices Impacting Risk for Sudden Infant Death

verfasst von: Anita Mathews, Rosalind Oden, Brandi Joyner, Jianping He, Robert McCarter, Rachel Y. Moon

Erschienen in: Journal of Community Health | Ausgabe 2/2016

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Abstract

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and other sleep-related deaths, including accidental suffocation, account for ~4000 US deaths annually. Parents may have higher self-efficacy with regards to preventing accidental suffocation than SIDS. The objective of this study was to assess self-efficacy in African–American mothers with regards to safe sleep practices and risk for SIDS and accidental suffocation. As part of randomized clinical trial in African–American mothers of newborn infants, mothers completed a baseline survey about knowledge of and attitudes towards safe sleep recommendations, current intent, self-efficacy, and demographics. Tabular and adjusted, regression-based analyses of these cross-sectional data evaluated the impact of the message target (SIDS risk reduction vs. suffocation prevention) on perceived self-efficacy. 1194 mothers were interviewed. Mean infant age was 1.5 days. 90.8 % of mothers planned to place their infant supine, 96.7 % stated that their infant would sleep in the same room, 3.6 % planned to bedshare with the infant, and 72.9 % intended to have soft bedding in the crib. Mothers were more likely to believe that prone placement (70.9 vs. 50.5 %, p < 0.001), bedsharing (73.5 vs. 50.1 %, p < 0.001), and having soft bedding in the sleep area (78.3 vs. 59.5 %, p < 0.001) increased their infant’s risk for suffocation than it did for SIDS. Mothers had higher self-efficacy, viz. increased confidence that their actions could keep their infant safe, with regards to suffocation than SIDS (88.0 vs. 79.4 %, p < 0.001). These differences remained significant when controlled for sociodemographics, grandmother in home, number of people in home, and breastfeeding intention. Maternal self-efficacy is higher with regards to prevention of accidental suffocation in African-Americans, regardless of sociodemographics. Healthcare professionals should discuss both SIDS risk reduction and prevention of accidental suffocation when advising African–American parents about safe sleep practices.
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Metadaten
Titel
Differences in African–American Maternal Self-Efficacy Regarding Practices Impacting Risk for Sudden Infant Death
verfasst von
Anita Mathews
Rosalind Oden
Brandi Joyner
Jianping He
Robert McCarter
Rachel Y. Moon
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2016
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Community Health / Ausgabe 2/2016
Print ISSN: 0094-5145
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-3610
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10900-015-0088-z

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