Le Bonheur Practical Parenting Blog Home Le Bonheur Children's Hospital
Drop Side Cribs Outlawed
last updated:
Thu, 1/13/2011 1:22 PM

After the deaths of more than 30 infants and toddlers in the past decade and millions of recalls, the government has outlawed drop-side cribs. It's the end of the traditional crib that has cradled millions of babies for generations. The government has outlawed drop-side cribs after the deaths of more than 30 infants and toddlers in the past decade and millions of recalls.

It was a unanimous vote by the Consumer Product Safety Commission to ban the manufacture, sale and resale of the cribs, which have a side rail that moves up and down, allowing parents to more easily lift their child from the crib.

The new standard requiring cribs to have fixed sides would take effect in June. The move by CPSC would also prohibit hotels and childcare centers from using drop-sides, though those facilities would have two years to purchase new cribs. CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum hailed the new standard for cribs as one of the strongest in the world.

 "I believe these new standards will markedly reduce crib-related hazards and help to ensure that young children sleep more safely in their cribs," Tenenbaum said after the vote.

Around for decades, drop-side cribs have come under scrutiny in recent years because of malfunctioning hardware, sometimes less expensive plastics, or assembly problems that can lead to the drop-side rail partially detaching from the crib. When that happens, it can create a dangerous "V'-like gap between the mattress and side rail where a baby can get caught and suffocate or strangle. In all, drop-side cribs have been blamed in the deaths of at least 32 infants and toddlers since 2000 and are suspected in another 14 infant fatalities.

In the past five years, more than 9 million drop-side cribs have been recalled, including cribs from big-name companies such as Evenflo, Delta Enterprise Corp., and Pottery Barn Kids. Michele Witte of Merrick, N.Y., lost her 10-month-old son, Tyler, in 1997 when the drop-side rail on his crib came loose, partially detached and then trapped his neck between the rail and the headboard.

"It's been a long 13 years," said Witte. "I feel like it's a celebratory time because things are finally being done about the issue." Witte appeared at a news conference on Capitol Hill with Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., and Rep. Joe Crowley, D-N.Y., all of whom have pushed for stronger crib safety rules.

The new standard mandates tougher safety testing for cribs, tests that more closely mimic a child in a crib. As children get older, they can apply more force to the crib — shaking on it, running around in it, jumping up and down. The new tests aim to make sure the cribs can take that kind of pressure. Better labeling on crib pieces will also be required — a measure that aims to cut down on the misassembly problems that some parents have encountered, problems that can lead to the death of a child.

Parents who lost their children in drop-side cribs say today's ban couldn't come soon enough. Chad Johns, whose 9-month-old son, Liam, died in a drop-side crib in 2005, said he was a little relieved. "Yes, it's a long time coming," said Johns from Roseville, Calif. "But the fact that it is happening — that's what is important." Crib makers were already phasing out drop-side cribs over the last couple years, amid increasing problems with them. And last year, the organization that sets voluntary industry standards — ASTM International — approved a drop-side ban.

Many parents, however, still have drop-sides in their homes. They can also be found at secondhand stores. The Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association, which represents over 90 percent of the crib industry, says properly assembled drop-sides that haven't been recalled can be safely used.

Source: Associated Press

Calendar

« May 2012
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
  
1
2
5
6
7
8
9
12
13
15
16
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
  
       
Today


Related Links

Subscribe

Subscribe  Subscribe via RSS

Share

Bookmark and Share

Tag Cloud

2010 2011 aap abbott accident accutane acetaminophen acl acne activities activity adolescent adolescents advice advocacy age-appropriate airplane alarms alcohol-poisoning alex-arevalo allergies allergy allison-beck allregies amanda-helton american-academy-pediatrics anaphylaxis and andrew-wakefield anesthesia antibiotics anxiety appendectomy appendicitis appreciation arm's-reach-concepts arnold arrhythmia athletes atv autism autism-speaks babies baby baby-bottles baby-safety-month babysitter back back-to-school backpacks bacterial bad barry-gilmore batteries battery-safety be-proud! be-responsible! bed beds bedside bedtime bedtime-routine bedwetting bee belly-button belt belts benadryl bike bike-safety bike-safety. bites blinds bmi boating body bones bonheur booster booster-seats boosters bottle boys brain-awarness brain-development brain-injury brandon-edgerson breast-feeding-awareness-week breastfeeding breastmilk brittany-cochran broken bronchiolitis brooklyn-barton bullying burn burn-prevention burns caffeine campbell-clinic camps cancer candles capsules car car-safety car-seats cara-mohundro carbon-monoxide cardiac cardiac-kids-camp cardiology care cars carseat carts cdc cell center-for-children-and-parents changes checkup child child-care child-development child-health-day child-life child-safety children choking choking-hazards christie christie-michael clinic-dietitian clinical-deitician clinical-dietitian clinical-nurtition clinical-nutrition clocks clubfoot cojoined-twins cold cold-weather colic commercial-appeal community-health-and-well-being concussion concussion; congenital-anomaly congenital-heart-defects connection consultant consumer-product-safety-commission consumption contact conversation cooking cooking-safety cough coverkids cpcs cpr crib cribs crossings crying cspc curse-words cuts cynthia-cross daily-news damage dana-givens danger danielle-keeton daylight-savings death decorations department derek derek-kelly dermatology development developmental-milestones diabetes dietary-guidelines digestion dinner disease dog dona-clarin donating-breastmilk down dr. drain dreams drinks driver's driving drop-side drowning dying e.-coli ear-infection early-development early-intervention eczema education emergency emergency-department emergency-services endocrinology energy entrapment environment epilepsy epileptologist equipment equipment; esther-mitchie evonte-cathey exercise exhaustion; facts fall family fawn-galvan fda fdc fever fire fire-safety firework flu fun ginger-joe guidelines h1n1 halloween hamblen healthy heart heat heat-safety holiday holidays home homework how-to hydration immunizations infection infectious infectious-disease influenza injury james-wheless jerome-thompson john-devincenzo john-hill john-paul-carpenter katelyn-wolfe keith-english kelley-lee kids kip-frizzell le lead lunch measles media medicine mid-south midsouth nap nephrology neurology neuroscience neuroscience-institute nutrition obesity orthopedics otc otolaryngology parents pediatric-epilepsy pertussis pharmacy play poison poisoning preparation prevention puberty public-policy recall recalls risk robert-schoumacher routine rsv ruth-munday safe safe-kids safe-kids-mid-south safety sandy-arnold school scoliosis seasonal seat seats seizures sex shopping sids sleep smoke smoke-alarms sore-throat spine sports strangulation stroke stroller summer sun sunscreen surgery susan-helms swim swimming symptoms talking teens texting thanksgiving thomas-hobson tips to toys trampoline travel tylenol vaccine vaccines water water-safety whooping window winter
Contact Us Patient Privacy Practices Disclaimer Newsroom Our Centers of Excellence

Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center is a leading children's hospital in the Mid South, providing pediatric care to children from 95 counties in six states.
50 N. Dunlap Street, Memphis, Tennessee 38103 • (901) 287-KIDS