whakawhetu sudi

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The SIDS/SUDI story: our role in General Practice?

David Tipene-Leach General Practitioner

New Zealand IMR falls from 2009

New Zealand IMR falls from 2009

Māori IMR falls by a third

Sudden infant death syndrome • Baby below 1 year age died in sleep • Where cause of death is unknown Even after a post-mortem And a full medical history

1980’s: highest SIDS rate in world SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

Māori SIDS twice as high

1980’s Māori SIDS twice as high SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10

8.5

8 6

4.0

4 2 0

1980 - 1990

Non-Maori SIDS rate

NZ Cot Death Study (1988-1990) ‘Modifiable’ risk factors Prone sleep position Maternal cigarette smoking Not breast feeding Bed sharing

OR 4.48 OR 1.79 OR 1.89 OR 2.02

NZ Cot Death Study (1988-1990) ‘Non-modifiable’ RF’s • Low socio-economic status

Poor

• young maternal school leaving age young and unmarried motherhood greater number of previous pregnancies

Young

• little or late antenatal care non-attendance at antenatal classes • LBW prematurity

Poor access to care Bad maternal outcomes

1991 Cot Death Prevention campaign SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

Observation of decreasing SIDS deaths

Cot Death Prevention campaign SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

National and non-Māori SIDS are decreasing

Cot Death Prevention campaign SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

What happened to the Māori rates?

Cot death prevention campaign Reduction of SIDS: Rates 1986-1992 NZ:

3.6 to 1.6

Maori:

7.4 to 6.9

The disparity in rates has gone from 2x to 5x

(Mitchell et al 1994)

Māori SIDS Prevention Team South Auckland 19931994 Public Health Commission

Prevention/health promotion Workforce development

Māori SIDS Prevention Team SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate 12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

Māori SIDS Prevention Team SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

Decrease in Māori SIDS rate

But what happened next? SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

2002-2010

Sudden unexpected death in infancy In later years as SIDS deaths fell and More ‘possible overlaying’ was seen Diagnosis became much more difficult And so … SUDI includes “accidental suffocation”

SUDI in NZ: (2002-2008) Highest rate in the Western world Rates have plateau’ed Huge disparities – Māori 2.3/1000 – Pacific 1.3/1000 – n-M,n-P 0.5/1000 Child and Youth Mortality Review Committee; 2009.

What did we know about SUDI? Unsafe sleeping places • Car seats and sofas • Co-sleeping compromised adults • Co-sleeping with children

What did we know about SUDI? Unsafe sleeping practices • • • • •

Sleeping prone Pillows/bumpers Blankets over head Non return to SSE after feeding Change of routine: sleeping place and/or car

What did we know about SUDI? Bedsharing and smoking in pregnancy • • • •

Scragg and Mitchell BMJ 1993 Scragg and Mitchell NZMJ 1996 Mitchell and Milerad R.Env.Hlth 2006 Mitchell Acta Paed Scan 2009

What did we know about SUDI? RF’s – Bedsharing

Māori

non-M

20(+45)%

20(+7)%

– Smok/preg

51%

7%

– BS + Smoke

21%

1%

1 Tipene-Leach

et al 2010

2Hutchison

et al 2006

What did we know about SUDI? of the 50-80 SUDI infants a year Over 60% are Māori Nearly all are smokers and Over half are bed-sharers

What did we know about SUDI? Looking for a new intervention Deal with smoking – hard to fix problem Deal with bedsharing – resistance by Māori

Bedsharing where there was smoking in pregnancy

Looking for a new intervention Modification of interacting risks “The removal of one of two interacting risk factors will remove the risk associated with the interacting pair”

Looking for a new intervention Can bedsharing be more safe? in the international recommendations ‘Separate sleeping surface’ and eliminating unsafe factors ‘Safe Sleeping Environment’

Looking for a new intervention

Independent of smoking



.

Separate sleeping surface Safe sleeping environments

Looking for a new intervention

Independent of smoking



.

Separate sleeping surface Safe sleeping environments

Looking for a new intervention

Independent of smoking



.

Separate sleeping surface Safe sleeping environments

The wahakura – a new intervention Safe sleep rules • • • • • • • •

back position face clear smoke free adult free firm mattress loose blankets/pillows/bumper and toy free not over wrapped or over heated remind every caregiver of rules

The wahakura – a new intervention

The wahakura – a new intervention .

Need evidence for wahakura Hard/expensive to access Need more available alternatives to wahakura

Alternatives .

Waikawa Simple quick weaving method

Alternatives The Pepi-Pod More easily available plastic box

Change for our Children, Christchurch

Evidence The Wahakura Qualitative Study Beliefs and opinions about the wahakura How the wahakura is used in normal practice Whether the safe sleep rules are understood

Evidence Kahungunu Safe Sleep Study (KISS) Randomised controlled trial To determine the safety and other benefits, or harm, of using a wahakura compared to a bassinet

Evidence KISS: Risks and benefits of a sleep environment

Risks

Thermal Hypoxia Head covering

Benefits

Sleep improvement Mother infant interaction ‘Attachment’

No difference in the environments (risks) Extended breastfeeding in the wahakura group Wahakura to be a ‘safe’ sleep environment

Evidence 2014 BMC Paeds Methodology and recruitment for a randomised controlled trial to evaluate the safety of wahakura for infant bedsharing 2014 NZMJ The wahakura: A qualitative study of the flax bassinet as a sleep location for New Zealand Māori infants

Evidence 2015 Paediatrics (in review) Safe infant sleep: a randomised controlled trial to compare an indigenous sleep device with a portable bassinet. 2015 (in preparation) A randomised controlled trial using overnight sleep studies in the home to evaluate an indigenous infant sleep device.

DHB Safe sleep projects • Audit of SS Env & SS Practice • Provision of SS Env • Proliferation of SS Messages • Including South Auckland

So whats out there for us in GP-land? Supply Wahakura and Pepi-Pods DHB projects

Evidence WQS, KISS, Haumaru Moe

Community Whakawhetū DHBs and MOH

So whats out there for us in GP-land? Risk factors Smoking in pregnancy Breastfeeding support Back sleeping Exhortation about alcohol Safe Sleep device

So whats out there for us in GP-land? Whakawhetu SUDI calculator Ed Mitchell Developing an App Individual baby risk “Change of behaviour’ Being pilotted in S Auckland

So whats out there for us in GP-land? Whakawhetu SUDI online training www.learnonline.health.nz www.whakawhetu.co.nz CME points

So whats out there for us in GP-land? Whakawhetu

‘Weave off’, SS picnics, wananga, buggy walk, maternity fashion show

Great news to finish with SIDS/SUDI Rate NZ 1978 - 2012 SIDS rate 12

Deaths per 1000 births

10 8 6 4 2 0

Maori SIDS rate

Non-Maori SIDS rate

Great news to finish with

The SIDS/SUDI story: our role in General Practice

David Tipene-Leach General Practitioner