
More or Less Dr Spock’s dangerous advice on baby sleep
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Apr 11, 2026 Helen Pearson, Nature editor and author of Beyond Belief, explores how well‑meaning advice can go wrong. She tells the story of Dr Benjamin Spock’s 1958 naptime recommendation and how practice shifted without strong evidence. The discussion traces early signals, late policy reversals, and the slow reckoning that followed.
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Spock's 1958 Front Sleeping Recommendation
- Benjamin Spock changed Baby and Child Care in 1958 to recommend babies sleep on their fronts instead of their backs.
- Helen Pearson confirmed her mum followed that advice and read the 1958 passage saying stomach sleeping was preferable if the baby was willing.
Rising Front Sleeping Coincided With SIDS Epidemic
- As front sleeping rose in the 1960s–70s, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) cases also increased, creating an apparent epidemic without a clear cause.
- Early theories proliferated but rigorous evidence was missing, so the signal linking sleeping position to deaths remained unclear.
Early Studies Hinted But Didn't Prove Risk
- Case-control studies in 1965 and 1970 hinted that more SIDS cases were found face down, but results lacked statistical significance and clarity amid many risk factors.
- The complex, noisy causation of SIDS meant early studies couldn't isolate front sleeping as a clear culprit.





