| Literature DB >> 32781989 |
Jacqueline Müller-Nordhorn1,2, Alice Schneider3,4, Ulrike Grittner3,4, Konrad Neumann3,4, Thomas Keil5,6, Stefan N Willich1, Sylvia Binting7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) - including sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) - continues to be a major contributor to infant mortality worldwide. Our objective was to analyse time trends and to identify country-clusters.Entities:
Keywords: Country-clusters; Sudden infant death syndrome; Sudden unexpected infant death; Time trends
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32781989 PMCID: PMC7418369 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-020-02271-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes for sudden infant death syndrome, related diagnoses and all causes of death
| Codes of diseases | ICD-8 | ICD-9 | ICD-10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sudden infant death syndrome | 795 | 798.0 | R95 |
| Accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed | E913.0 | E913.0 | W75 |
| Ill-defined and unknown causes of mortality | 796 | 798.1–798.9, 799 | R96-R99 |
| All causes of death | 000-E999 | 001-E999 | A00-Y89 |
Fig. 1Regional distribution of infant mortality rates from sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) per 1000 live births in 10-year intervals; top: Europe, bottom left: Americas, bottom right: Australia, Japan, New Zealand
Fig. 2Distribution of sudden unexpected infant death by its component diagnoses, according to country (2010); SIDS (ICD-10, R95), ill-defined and unknown causes of mortality (ICD-10, R96–99), accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed (ICD10, W75)
Fig. 3Country-clusters of sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) and all-cause infant mortality (1980–2010)
Maximum of sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) per 1000 live births per country-cluster (based on smoothed curves)
| Maximum of SUID | Year of maximum | |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | 2.14 | 1984 |
| Belgium | 2.63 | 1987 |
| France | 3.48 | 1986 |
| Ireland | 2.32 | 1986 |
| Luxembourg | 2.80 | 1985 |
| New Zealand | 3.94 | 1980 |
| Scotland | 2.22 | 1985 |
| USA | 2.56 | 1980 |
| West Germany | 1.88 | 1987 |
| Austria | 1.52 | 1987 |
| Canada | 2.07 | 1980 |
| Denmark | 1.83 | 1986 |
| England & Wales | 1.98 | 1985 |
| Netherlands | 1.34 | 1982 |
| Norway | 2.15 | 1986 |
| Sweden | 1.59 | 1984 |
| Switzerland | 1.07 | 1989 |
| Bulgaria | 0.25 | 2010 |
| Chile | 0.69 | 2000 |
| Hungary | 0.32 | 1998 |
| Poland | 0.33 | 1990 |
| Uruguay | 1.50 | 2001 |
| Czech Republic | 0.26 | 1992 |
| East Germany | 0.86 | 1994 |
| Finland | 0.63 | 1986 |
| Italy | 0.24 | 1992 |
| Japan | 0.52 | 1994 |
| Portugal | 1.23 | 1980 |
| Spain | 0.39 | 1993 |
Fig. 4Country-clusters of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and all-cause infant mortality (1980–2010)
Maximum of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) per 1000 live births per country-cluster (based on smoothed curves)
| Maximum of SIDS | Year of maximum | |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | 2.12 | 1984 |
| Austria | 1.57 | 1988 |
| Belgium | 2.01 | 1988 |
| Denmark | 1.83 | 1986 |
| England & Wales | 1.93 | 1985 |
| France | 1.88 | 1988 |
| Ireland | 2.31 | 1986 |
| New Zealand | 3.93 | 1980 |
| Norway | 2.09 | 1986 |
| Scotland | 2.20 | 1986 |
| USA | 1.59 | 1981 |
| West Germany | 1.70 | 1987 |
| Canada | 1.30 | 1980 |
| Finland | 0.57 | 1986 |
| Japan | 0.39 | 1995 |
| Netherlands | 1.04 | 1983 |
| Sweden | 1.00 | 1987 |
| Switzerland | 0.98 | 1989 |
| Chile | 0.53 | 2000 |
| Hungary | 0.31 | 1998 |
| Poland | 0.28 | 1990 |
| Uruguay | 0.75 | 1998 |
| Czech Republic | 0.25 | 1993 |
| East Germany | 0.74 | 1994 |
| Italy | 0.13 | 1993 |
| Portugal | 0.09 | 1986 |
| Spain | 0.31 | 1992 |