The most significant risk factors associated with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) include sleeping on the stomach or side, exposure to tobacco smoke before and after birth, overheating, and soft bedding in the sleep environment. Other risk factors include premature birth, low birth weight, and maternal smoking during pregnancy.
The most significant risk factors for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) include sleeping on the stomach or side, exposure to smoke before or after birth, overheating, soft bedding in the sleep environment, and prematurity or low birth weight.
Sleep Apnea
The single most significant risk factor for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is placing a baby to sleep on their stomach or side instead of on their back.
Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is still too poorly understood for this to have a definitive answer. There has been a myriad of studies on the causation of SIDS, and many links have been found in both environmental and genetic factors, yet the results are still inconclusive. In most cases, apnea is purely a mechanical suspension of breathing, meaning it isn't a disease that could be genetic or pathogen-borne.
Infants are most at risk for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) between the ages of 1 and 4 months.
The best decision.
Neurovascular compromise-
Death is the most significant risk.
To know which combination of factors is most likely to produce a significant value it is important to know what the factors are. Without knowing what factors there are to choose from it is hard to know what the answer is.
O_o
The United States has the highest SIDS rate. There are 2800/yr in the USA. China and Japan have the lowest at about .5/1000. New Zealand has a very low rate right now but it used to be high a few years ago.
No a baby's nose does no bleed after dying from SIDS. It is as if they just drifted off to sleep. For the most part this is true, but there are times when, after death, blood does come out of the ears and nose.