Skip to main content

Safe Sleep For Your Baby

The leading causes of death in babies from one month to 12 months are sleep-related infant deaths, including Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), accidental suffocation, and strangulation in bed.  A safe sleep environment can reduce the risk of all sleep-related infant deaths.

African American babies are more than two times as likely to die of SIDS as white babies. American Indian/Alaskan Native babies are nearly three times as likely to die of SIDS as white babies. 

Listed below are examples of ways babies in Oklahoma have died after being put down to sleep in an unsafe space:

  • Suffocating when another person fell asleep with the baby and laid on top of the baby
  • Suffocating when blankets got on the baby’s face and the baby could not breathe
  • Suffocating after getting stuck between the wall and the mattress on an adult bed
  • Suffocating after getting stuck between two mattresses, couch pillows, or recliner cushions
  • Suffocating on debris after falling off the bed onto pile of soft items
  • Strangling on a mini-blind cord that was too long and too close to the crib
  • Strangling between bars on a crib or adult bed that were too far apart

To reduce sleep-related infant deaths, the Oklahoma State Department of Health encourages using safe sleep recommendations listed.


Contact Information

Email: MCH@health.ok.gov
Phone: (405) 426-8113

Mailing Address:
Oklahoma State Department of Health
Maternal and Child Health Service
123 Robert S. Kerr Ave, Ste. 1702
Oklahoma City, OK 73102-6406

Physical Address:
Oklahoma State Department of Health
Maternal and Child Health Service
123 Robert S. Kerr Ave
Oklahoma City, OK

truetrue