Global Pediatric Health (Nov 2017)

Qualitative Assessment of Pregnant Women’s Perceptions of Infant Sleep Boxes

  • Carolyn R. Ahlers-Schmidt PhD,
  • Christy Schunn LSCSW,
  • Michelle L. Redmond PhD,
  • Sharla Smith PhD,
  • Molly Brown MPH,
  • Stephanie N. Kuhlmann DO,
  • Matthew Engel MPH,
  • Mary Benton PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X17744948
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Although several states have implemented programs providing boxes for infant sleep, safe sleep experts express concern regarding the paucity of safety and efficacy research on boxes. The purpose of this study was to assess pregnant women’s perceptions regarding use of baby sleep boxes. A convenience sample was recruited from a community prenatal education program. Twenty-eight women were administered a brief semistructured interview about their knowledge of baby sleep boxes, opinions about the boxes, and questions they would have. For most (n = 15, 54%), this was their first pregnancy. Participants self-identified as white (43%), black (36%), Hispanic (18%), and “other” (4%). Ten subthemes emerged related to previous knowledge of boxes (useful for families in need, historic precedent in other countries), positive attributes (portable, compact, affordable, decorative), and negative attributes (low to ground, structural integrity/design, stability, stigma). Research on safety and efficacy could reduce concerns, but issues of stigma may persist.