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- Dr. Benjamin Spock’s bestselling parenting book, influential from the 1940s through the 1960s, promoted more permissive and affectionate child-rearing, breaking from rigid traditional methods.
- One critical piece of advice, added in the 1958 edition, was to place babies to sleep on their stomachs (prone position) to supposedly reduce choking risks and prevent flat heads.
- This recommendation initially seemed reasonable amid debates, but by the 1970s, scientific studies clearly showed prone sleeping dramatically increased the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), tripling it according to early evidence.
- Despite mounting research proving the dangers, Spock stubbornly refused to update his book for nearly a decade, continuing to push the harmful advice even as data emerged.
- A 2005 historical analysis estimated that this delayed correction, driven heavily by Spock’s massive influence, contributed to at least 50,000-60,000 unnecessary infant deaths across the US, Europe, and Australasia after 1970.
- Spock’s book was the second-best-selling nonfiction title for decades (behind only the Bible), making his outdated, non-evidence-based guidance reach millions of trusting parents.
- The tragedy underscores the dangers of “expert” advice that prioritizes personal opinion over emerging science, with great influence carrying great responsibility.
Read the full story: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/did-dr-spocks-parenting-advice-kill-60000-babies
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