This is Scientific American 60-Second Health, I'm Dina Fine Maron. Got a minute?
When it comes to feeling safe and warm, there's nothing like being tightly bundled up in blankets.
And snugly swaddling for babies is on the rise,
it can sooth excessive crying and help induce sleep.
Nine out of 10 infants in North America are swaddled in the first six months of life,
and the demand for swaddling clothes soared by 61 percent in the U.K.between 2010 and 2011.
But there's a downside to the resurgence of traditional swaddling,
where the arms are restrained and the legs are stretched out:
fears that it will fuel developmental hip problems in babies, known to be linked to the technique.
Swaddling can force the hips to straighten and shift forward, causing misalignment.
Which can boost the risk of osteoarthritis and the need for hip replacement in middle age.
That's according to a report in Archives of Disease in Childhood.
These issues do not mean we need to drop swaddling altogether.
It can be safe as long as the swaddling allows a baby's legs to bend up and out at the hips, allowing the hip joints to develop normally.
With that in mind, infants and their parents can rest easy.
Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Health. I'm Dina Fine Maron.
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