“Always use the provided restraints, always place infants on their backs to sleep, and make sure that no pillows, blankets or extra padding are placed in the Rock ’n Play sleeper,” Fisher-Price said in a separate statement released by Mattel, its parent company. “A child fatality is an unimaginable tragedy.”
The statements did not specifically explain how the infants died and representatives from the companies and agency were unavailable on Saturday.
Parenting blogs have praised the baby sleeper for years. In a blog post from 2016 on storyoffive.com, a mother called the sleeper the best baby product she had ever bought. In a blog post in February, writers at CynicalParent.com called it “magic” but suggested that parents see their child’s pediatrician before making a purchase.
In a 2013 blog post, Dr. Roy Benaroch, a pediatrician in Atlanta, wrote his first recommendation against using it. He cited sleep guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics as reason enough not to use the Rock ’n Play.
“The guidelines went over several important ways that parents can ensure that their children were sleeping safely,” Dr. Benaroch said on Saturday. “Among them was that babies should be placed to sleep on a firm, flat surface, and on their back. The Rock ’n Play is neither firm nor flat.”