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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Tushar Shah is with the Department of Pediatrics, Metro-health Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. Kevin Sullivan and John Carter are with the Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, Atlanta, Ga.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Kevin Sullivan, PhD, MPH, MHA, Associate Professor, Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University, 1518 Clifton Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 30322 (e-mail: cdckms{at}sph.emory.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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We investigated the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy on the relative risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) by linking data from Georgia birth and death certificates from 1997 to 2000. We estimated the effect of misclassifying smokers as non-smokers and the effect of being misclassified on SIDS rates, and we calculated the fraction of cases caused by exposure. Of all SIDS cases, 21% were attributable to maternal smoking; among smokers, 61% of SIDS cases were attributable to maternal smoking. Maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with a significantly increased risk of SIDS.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Known risk factors for SIDS include sleeping in the prone position, being exposed to smoke pre- and postnatally, sharing a bed with a mother who smokes, hyperthermia, lack of breastfeeding, and sleeping on soft surfaces.2
Even though the rate of SIDS cases in the United States decreased by 40% from 1992 to 1999, the surgeon general reports that smoking rates during pregnancy may be as high as 22%.3 As shown by Guntheroth in low-income women,4 prenatal exposure to smoking likely means exposure to smoking during pregnancy and after pregnancy as well. According to that study, of the low-income women who smoked, most continued to smoke throughout their pregnancy; of those who quit, most returned to smoking during the pregnancy or shortly after delivery.
Studies have also shown that, on birth certificates, mothers smoking status has been found to be substantially misclassified.5 Dietz et al.5 used a 2-sample capturerecapture method to estimate the completeness of recorded prenatal smoking on birth certificates in Georgia and found that whereas the reported maternal smoking from 1993 to 1995 was 13.3%, their estimate by the capturerecapture method was 20.8%. Because underreporting and misclassification of smoking status leads to a biased estimate of the smokingSIDS relationship, we linked birth and infant mortality records from the state of Georgia to examine the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy on the frequency of SIDS cases in Georgia.
| METHODS |
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We then attempted to estimate a more valid measure of association between maternal smoking and SIDS by correcting the figures we obtained for smoker misclassification on the basis of estimates from Dietz et al.5
| RESULTS |
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The prevalence of reported smoking on birth certificates was 9.0%; when we used the capturerecapture method as described by Dietz et al.,5 we estimated the proportion of women who smoked during pregnancy to be 16.5%. When we applied this rate to the adjusted odds ratio of 2.3, we estimated the true odds ratio for the smokingSIDS association (after we controlled for the previously mentioned factors and accounted for misclassification) to be 2.6, with an etiological fraction (the fraction of cases caused by exposure) in the population of 20.7% and etiological fraction in smokers of 61.3% (Table 2
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| DISCUSSION |
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This study was based on birth and death certificate data. The information on maternal smoking and other maternal behaviors was self-reported, which may have led to maternal smoking misclassification. It was not possible to assess the effect of sleeping position on SIDS in this study.
Given the current level of understanding of the mechanisms by which SIDS occurs, public health programs have concentrated on avoidance of modifiable risk factors. Maternal smoking during pregnancy appears to be the primary modifiable risk factor for SIDS.615
| Acknowledgments |
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Human Participant Protection
No protocol or institutional review board approval was needed for this study because the data received from the Division of Public Health were devoid of any unique identifiers.
| Footnotes |
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Contributors
T. Shah and K. Sullivan designed the study, performed the analysis, and wrote the brief. J. Carter was instrumental in procuring the data for the study.
Accepted for publication November 8, 2005.
| References |
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2. Georgia Division of Public Health. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and Other Infant Death (OID) Information, Support and Referral Program. Available at: http://health.state.ga.us/programs/sids/index.asp. Accessed January 20, 2005.
3. Guntheroth WG. Crib Death: The Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. 3rd ed. Seattle, Wash: University of Washington, Futura Publishing Co; 1995.
4. US Dept of Health and Human Services. Women and Smoking: A Report of the Surgeon General. Washington, DC: Office of the Surgeon General; 2001.
5. Dietz PM, Adams MM, Kendrick JS, Mathis MP, PRAMS Working Group. Completeness of ascertainment of prenatal smoking using birth certificates and confidential questionnaires. Am J Epidemiol. 1998;148: 10481054.
6. Alm B, Milerad J, Wennergren G. A case-control study of smoking and sudden infant death syndrome in the Scandinavian countries, 1992 to 1995. The Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study. Arch Dis Child. 1998;78: 329334.
7. Alm B, Wennergren G, Norvenius G. Caffeine and alcohol as risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome. Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study. Arch Dis Child. 1999;81:107111.
8. Daltveit AK, Irgens LM, Oyen N, Skjaerven R, Markestad T, Wennergren G. Circadian variations in sudden infant death syndrome: associations with maternal smoking, sleeping position and infections. The Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study. Acta Paediatr. 2003;92:10071013.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
9. Schoendorf KC, Parker JD, Batkhan LZ, Kiely JL. Comparability of the birth certificate and 1988 Maternal and Infant Health Survey. Vital Health Stat 2. 1993; No. 116:119.
10. Ruggiero L, Bane CM, Dryfoos JM, Rossi JS. Development of a pregnancy-tailored decisional balance measure for smoking cessation. Addict Behav. 1999;24:795799.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
11. Taylor JA, Sanderson M. A reexamination of the risk-factors for the sudden infant death syndrome. J Pediatr. 1995;126:887891.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
12. Klonoff-Cohen HS, Edelstein SL, Lefkowitz ES. The effect of passive smoking and tobacco exposure through breast milk on sudden infant death syndrome. JAMA. 1995;273:795798.
13. Naeye RL, Ladis B, Drage JS. Sudden infant death syndrome: a prospective study. Am J Dis Child. 1976; 130:12071210.
14. Valdes-Dapena M. Sudden infant death syndrome: overview of recent research developments from a pathologists perspective. Pediatrician. 1988;15:222230.[Medline]
15. Malloy MH, Hoffman HJ, Peterson DR. Sudden infant death syndrome and maternal smoking. Am J Public Health. 1992;82:13801382.
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