Letter to the Editor

LETTERS: 'BACK TO SLEEP' PROGRAM IS WORKING

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To the editor:

A study published recently in the Journal of the American Medical Association and reported by newspapers nationwide links a dramatic decline in reports of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome to a simple precautionary action taken by caregivers: placing babies to sleep on their backs instead of their stomachs.

According to the report, the rate of SIDS death cases in the United States has been cut in half over the past five years, thanks to the nation's "Back to Sleep" campaign in which parents were told to put babies to sleep on their backs.

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, which has supported the prevention campaign through grants to the Prevent Child Abuse-Illinois organization, encourages all Illinois parents and caretakers to protect to protect infants through this simple but vitally important measure.

Protecting children is a driving force that led most child-welfare workers to enter this helping profession. Like child abuse or neglect, protecting children from SIDS is a safety issue we treat very seriously. That is why our department this month sent "Back to Sleep" brochures to all 33,000 foster families and 13,000 licensed day-care providers in Illinois.

Whether a child is among the 46,000 wards of the state or the estimated 250,000 children served in licensed day-care homes and centers or among the millions of Illinois children who are our state's most precious resource, safety should be the paramount concern for all caretakers.

Placing babies to sleep on their backs is one way we can demonstrate this most critical concern.

MAUDLYNE INHEJIRKA, Chief of Communications

Illinois Department of Children and Family Services

Springfield, Ill.