Evidence summary for safety sleep protection strategy in infants
10.3760/cma.j.cn112150-20200828-01165
- VernacularTitle:婴儿安全睡眠保护策略的证据总结
- Author:
Rui HOU
1
;
Mei CHEN
;
Shijia LI
Author Information
1. 北京大学护理学院 100191
- Keywords:
Infant;
Sleep;
Evidence-based nursing;
Sudden infant death syndrome
- From:
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine
2021;55(3):386-393
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To systematically review and summarize the relevant evidence of safe sleep protection strategies for infants at home and abroad, to provide a reference for clinical evidence-based decision-making and guideline formulation.Methods:"Infant Death/Sudden Unexpected Infant Death/Sudden Infant Death Syndrome" and "Sleep protecting program/Sleep safety/Sleeping environment" were used as search keywords. The literature retrieval for all the Chinese and English evidence on safe sleep protection strategies for infants published before March 2020 was conducted by using the National Guideline Clearinghouse (NGC), Registered Nurse′ Association of Ontario (RNAO), National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN), Guidelines International Network (GIN), JBI, Clinical Evidence, China Evidence-based Medicine Center, PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Wanfang Data, CNKI and other databases. Inclusion criteria were guidelines, evidence summary and systematic reviews on infant safe sleep protection strategies for infants aged 0 to 1 years. The full text was available. Exclusion criteria include duplicates, directly translated documents as well as guide abstracts, discussion drafts, draft guides, interpretations, excerpts. The Appraisal of Guideline for research & Evaluation Instrument (AGREE Ⅱ) and A Measure Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR 2) were used to compare and evaluate the selected literature, and extracted evidence from the literature that meets the quality standards.Results:A total of 12 articles were incorporated into study, including 1 Summary of evidence from UptoDate, 3 guidelines, and 8 systematic reviews. The results of the AGREE II quality evaluation showed that the overall quality of 3 guidelines was high. Among them, there was 1 with a recommendation level of "A", and 2 with a rating of "B". The AMSTAR 2 quality evaluation showed that the contents of the systematic reviews were relatively complete except for one literature. In the end, totally 39 terms of evidences were summarized, including 6 aspects of assessment, planning, implementation, health education (pregnant women, parents and other infant caregivers), evaluation, organization and policy.Conclusion:The evidence summary of infant safe sleep protection provides evidence support for formulating infant safe sleep care standards and carrying out scientific and high-quality clinical nursing practices.