Safety advocates say product can cause infant
suffocating

updated 3:29 p.m. ET, Tues., March. 9, 2010
WASHINGTON - The government is preparing a safety warning about
baby slings — those popular and fashionable infant carriers that
parents strap around their chests to give the little ones a cuddle
on the move.
The concern: Infants can suffocate, and at least a few have.
The head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, Inez Tenenbaum,
said Tuesday that her agency is getting ready to issue a general
warning to the public, likely to go out this week, about the
slings.
“We know of too many deaths in these slings and we now know the
hazard scenarios for very small babies,” said Tenenbaum. “So, the
time has come to alert parents and caregivers.”
Tenenbaum spoke at a meeting of the Juvenile Products Manufacturers
Association, an industry trade group that certifies certain
children’s products, including soft infant carriers.
Tenenbaum did not single out any specific baby slings or discuss
the number of deaths linked to them. But there have been complaints
for a couple years now about some baby carriers.
In 2008, Consumer Reports raised concerns about the soft fabric
slings and some two dozen serious injuries, mostly when a child
fell out of them. A follow-up blog warned about a suffocation risk
and linked the slings to at least seven infant deaths.
Gerald Herbert / AP
The U.S. government is preparing a safety warning about baby slings
— those popular and fashionable infant carriers that parents can
sling around their chests to carry their baby.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consumer Reports, published by Consumers Union, complained about
the “SlingRider” by Infantino. The “bag style” sling wraps around
the parent’s neck and cradles the child in a curved or “C-like”
position, nestling the baby below mom’s chest or near her
belly.
It’s the “C-like” position that causes safety advocates to shudder.
They say the curved position can cause the baby, which has little
head and neck control in the early months, to flop its head
forward, chin-to-chest — restricting the baby’s ability to
breathe.
Another concern: that the baby can turn its face toward mom’s chest
or belly and smother in the parent’s clothing.
Infantino’s “SlingRider” was recalled in 2007 for problems with the
plastic sliders on the sling’s strap. But there have been no
recalls because of a suffocation risk.
A message seeking comment was left with an Infantino
representative.
Baby slings have been billed as an important way for new moms to
bond with their babies.
Use of slings, also known as “babywearing,” has become increasingly
popular in recent years, with colorful and vibrant slings seen on
Hollywood moms and sold everywhere from big retailers such as
Babies R Us to smaller outfits like BabySoSmart.com in Kansas City,
Mo.
Tiffany Speck, a nurse who owns BabySoSmart and sells her own baby
carriers, has been warning about slings where the baby falls into a
chin-to-chest position in the classes she teaches at hospitals,
stores and doctors’ offices.
“You wouldn’t want to put a baby in there,” Speck said during an
interview with The Associated Press. “The baby is curling, head
toward toe, and what happens is the baby occludes its own
airway.”
Speck recommends that babies in slings remain in an upright
position, with the baby’s tummy facing mommy’s tummy.
Article Source:
MSNBC
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