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Sometimes… The Government Needs to Step In

Monday, April 4th, 2011

There seems to be a lot of concern these days about the Government over stepping the boundaries of parenting choices. But sometimes, we just need someone playing big brother, and laying down some ground rules, because let’s be real here… not all parents are created equally, and some seriously lack common sense…

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NYT Takes on Crib Bedding

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

This week the New York Times took on Crib Bumpers, and agency regulations. Thank you to Andrew Martin for tackling this important issue.

Consumer Agency Tightens Scrutiny of Baby Sleep Products

By ANDREW MARTIN
Published: January 31, 2011

Three years ago, Dr. Bradley Thach, a professor of pediatrics at Washington University in St. Louis, published findings that had the potential to upend nurseries across the nation, and perhaps save some lives too.

Dilip Vishwanat for The New York Times

Dr. Bradley Thach’s findings about the dangers of crib bumpers are now getting a second look by the Consumer Products Safety Commission.

In reviewing data from the Consumer Products Safety Commission, Dr. Thach concluded that crib bumpers — the padding wrapped around the inside of a crib that often matches the bedding—were killing babies. In a 10-year period beginning in 1995, he found 27 suffocation deaths involving bumper pads, and he theorized that many more might have occurred because of inconsistencies in the data.

“Because bumpers can cause death, we conclude that they should not be used,” he warned.

The Consumer Products Safety Commission initially ignored the findings. Last summer, it reached the same conclusion as a trade group representing product manufacturers, which asserted that other factors, like a crib crowded with pillows or babies sleeping on their stomachs, might have been a factor in those deaths, rather than the bumpers. As a result, most parents remained unaware of the debate over the safety of crib bumpers.

Now, prompted by consumer advocates and news reports highlighting potential dangers, the commission has reversed itself and decided to take a deeper look at crib bumpers as part of a broader regulatory crackdown on the hazards of an extensive line of baby sleep products that have been blamed for more injuries and deaths.

The sweeping overview is another sign of a heightened regulatory atmosphere among many agencies in the Obama administration.

For example, in September, the commission, along with the Food and Drug Administration, warned parents not to use sleep positioners intended to keep babies on their backs. Some sleep positioners were marketed to parents as reducing the risks of sudden infant death syndrome, but in fact, the agencies said, the products had caused the suffocation death of 12 babies over the last dozen years or so.

Then, in October, the commission warned parents about the dangers of baby monitor cords and urged them to keep the cords away from cribs, bassinets and play yards. Since 2004, the commission has received six reports of babies being strangled by the cords.

In December, the commission approved the first new mandatory standards for cribs in nearly two decades. The new rules banned existing designs for drop-side cribs, which have been blamed for entrapping and killing at least 32 babies since 2000, and required more rigorous testing on all cribs.

In addition, day care centers will be required to replace over the next two years any cribs that do not comply with the new regulations.

Nancy A. Cowles, executive director of Kids In Danger, a nonprofit organization that monitors the safety of children’s products, said the new crib standards were “a huge leap forward,” after years of relative inaction by the safety commission.

“It’s the safest in the world,” she said of the new standards.

The crackdown on baby sleep products was brought about by a confluence of factors. After an influx of contaminated products, including toys from China, Congress passed the Consumer Products Safety Improvement Act of 2008 which gave the commission — long criticized as toothless — more money and authority.

As part of the new law, Congress mandated that the commission issue mandatory standards for more than a dozen baby products, including strollers, bassinets, high chairs and cribs, replacing voluntary guidelines that had been the norm. News reports documenting baby deaths from unsafe products, particularly in The Chicago Tribune, put additional pressure on the commission.

Since 2007, more than 10 million cribs have been recalled, and Inez Tenenbaum, who was named chairwoman of the commission by President Obama in 2009, said she had made the safety of baby sleep products a top priority, or what she calls the “Safe Sleep” campaign.

In an interview, Ms. Tenenbaum said that when she became chairwoman she put together a team of experts to review 10 years of injury and fatality data on cribs. The result was 19 crib recalls and expedited regulations, actions which she says have “cleaned up the marketplace.”

She said the commission had also tried to educate parents about how to keep a sleeping baby safe, distributing a video to pediatricians’ offices and hospitals.

In the next year, Ms. Tenenbaum said her agency would be writing new regulations for bassinets and toddler beds. She declined to comment on why the commission had not taken more forceful action sooner.

Even with a renewed focus on the safety of baby sleep products, Ms. Tenenbaum and others acknowledge that obstacles remain.

Though the commission has ordered the recall of millions of cribs and other sleep products, many of them are still being used by parents. In addition, some parents and caregivers continue to put babies to sleep on their stomachs; experts recommend that babies be put to sleep on their backs to prevent against suffocation or sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS.

And for all the attention on defective products, the majority of deaths of sleeping infants are caused by suffocation from pillows and other bedding that crowds a crib.

A commission report from July found that 531 deaths from 1992 to May 2008 were associated with pillows or cushions, an average of 35 deaths a year. In a vast majority of the cases, the babies were placed to sleep on their stomachs. In half the cases, the infants were put to sleep on top of a cushion or pillow.

There also remains some debate about what is safe for babies and what isn’t.

Several small manufacturers offer products that promise to reduce the incidence of sudden infant death syndrome, though medical experts and regulators remain dubious. Indeed, the F.D.A. says products that claim to prevent SIDS would be considered medical devices and therefore would require agency approval.

For instance, the Web site Eve’s Best claims that the BabeSafe mattress cover it sells has been “100 percent successful in preventing SIDS (crib death) for over 12 years.” The cover is promoted as preventing toxic gas from leaking out of the mattress, one controversial theory for the cause of SIDS.

“As a parent, I can tell you that the opinions of ‘government regulators’ as well as the A.A.P. mean absolutely nothing to me,” said Evie Maddox, who runs the Eve’s Best Web site, referring to the American Academy of Pediatrics. She said the cover was so safe that babies could sleep on their stomachs. “There are many well-educated parents out there who feel the same,” she said in an e-mail late last year.

Manufacturers of baby products, meanwhile, have challenged allegations that their products are unsafe. Michael Dwyer, executive director of the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association, said critics frequently claimed that a product was unsafe based on emotion, whereas his members relied on science-based facts.

After federal authorities warned parents not to buy sleep positioners, the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association suggested that parents could continue using them, as long as they used them properly.

And the association disputes the Dr. Thach’s findings on crib bumpers. Mr. Dwyer said the association commissioned its own study and found that it was often unclear what caused the babies’ death since there were other things crowded in the cribs, like pillows or soft toys. The association recommends that crib bumpers be firm, rather than pillowlike, and be removed from the crib when a baby is able to stand.

“Whereas bumpers may have been mentioned as being present in the crib, we really challenge whether the bumper was the cause,” he said.

For his part, Dr. Thach said he remained available to talk to regulators and industry officials about his findings. He noted that it was nearly impossible to buy bedding for a crib without bumpers.

“They are still selling them,” he said. “People see these in stores and assume they are safe.”

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Next Step: Wonder Bumpers

Saturday, January 29th, 2011

Some more progress in our nursery… Now just to get our Wonder Bumpers and complete the crib altogether, oh ya… and the mattress too!  LOL

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Nursery Decorating

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

One of our favorite Bloggers, and employee’s Danielle is expecting her third child, first little girl this spring and finally has started working on her nursery. Photographed below is her “before” picture of the bedroom, before she started working in it…

Lots of work, but over the next couple months, this will be transforming into a beautiful little girl room complete with Wonder Bumpers, Owls, and the cutest Babyletto crib on the market!

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1000th Twitter Follower Giveaway!

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

We are getting up there in our twitter followers… Right now we have 863 followers and counting… Our goal in the next week-weeks is to make it over 1000 followers.

Lucky for all our loyal supporters, readers, and followers… when we hit that 1000 number one lucky follower will win a $100 shopping spree to our online store!!  How exciting is that?

What do you have to do?

Follow this link right here to enter your name, and email address, and go on twitter and tweet about our giveaway, and encourage your friends and followers to follow us!!

Pretty simple right?

Make sure you go to SIGN UP!  The one random winner will be picked from the entries we get!!

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Crib Bumper Corruption: Where is the Accountability?

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

In recent months, more and more information has been coming out about the unsafe nature of traditional crib bumpers. Something most first time parents are roped into because of the cute factor when shopping for matching nursery decorations and crib bedding sets.

The problem is, there is no one standing in Babies R Us, and all these other baby retail chain stores warning mothers about these crib bumpers, and why they should not be using them in their cribs. No safety warnings on the packaging, no warnings in the stores or near the displays, and the crib and crib bedding companies are not going out of their way to say they shouldn’t be used in a crib with a baby.

Why? Because the money would come out of their pockets. Crib bumpers, and crib bedding is an annual million dollar industry in which hundreds of thousands of new parents are roped in to buy this product that could, and very well may kill their child.

It hasn’t been until recently that major news organizations are starting to pick up on stories of children killed by crib bumpers, and report it on a national scale. In December The Chicago Tribune published a expose piece on the Hidden Hazards of Crib Bumpers which made a huge splash onto the internet.

On what would become the worst night of his life, Kyle Maxwell fed his son, Preston, a bottle and rocked the 7-week-old baby to sleep. He put Preston in his crib, took a shower and went to bed.

The next morning, Kyle woke up feeling panicked. Preston wasn’t crying or cooing from his crib across the hall. Kyle jumped out of bed and ran the few steps to the baby’s room.

“That’s where the world turned upside down,” he said.

Preston was lying face down in his crib with his nose pressed between the mattress and crib bumper pad. Kyle screamed for his wife, Laura.

“There’s no life in him,” he remembers telling her, as she sobbed hysterically, holding their son eight months ago.

Preston’s autopsy report said he suffocated after his face became wedged between the mattress and bumper pad, which wraps around the inside of a crib and ties to crib slats.

Unfortunately for American parents, this happens too often, and is too under reported. But is corporate greed and corruption keeping our babies in danger?

Besides Mission (which stands for Mothers Investigating Safe Sleeping Options for Newborns) there aren’t many organizations or advocates involves in spreading the message of the serious death danger crib bumpers pose to  babies.

When is the greed going to stop, and when are the government agencies going to get involved like they did with the big recalls of drop side cribs. A hand full of deaths, and the entire product has banned in the United States. When will we see the same treatment for crib bumpers?  How many more babies have to lose their lives before there is a mass recall, and ban?

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Happy Holidays!

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

From all of us at Go Mama Go Designs, we would like to wish all of our customers, supporters, friends, and family a very Happy Holiday!

May you all have health, and happiness in the new year!

Don’t forget to check out our huge end of the year sale. Most products are 50-70% off as we speak!

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Crib Bumpers: Still Dangerous

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

Yesterday the Chicago Tribune published an amazing article on the serious risks of traditional crib bumpers. Not only did it discuss infant death as a result of a bumper, but it also showed many statistics that parents typically are not aware of. Alarming numbers that consumer safety agencies have known about for year, yet crib bumpers are still on the list of must haves for nurseries nationwide.

For the end of the year, Go Mama Go Designs has slashed the cost of our safe wonder bumpers 50%!   We truly care about mothers, and their babies and want the safest sleep spaces for your babies!

Help us fight against unsafe sleep spaces for babies, and have traditional crib bumpers recalled once and for all!

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Join us on Tuesday!

Sunday, November 28th, 2010

I know we may be a little late for thee Black Friday, but we are still going to celebrate it!!

We got tons of prizes to giveaway this week during our second twitter party which will be hosted by Danielle!

What can you win?

A set of our awesome Wonder Bumpers!!
A Maclaren Techno XT Stroller!!
A Weebles Tree House!!
3 Buggy Guards!!
3 OrganicKidz BPA Free Bottles!!
A Set of Holiday Return Address Labels from Mabel’s Labels!!
An Adventure Hero’s On-The-Go Set!!

All awesome gifts to get you ready for the Holiday Season!

So how can you win?

First you MUST RSVP!
After RSVP’ing make sure you like all of our sponsors on Facebook, and follow us all on Twitter…

Go Mama Go Designs on Facebook and Twitter.
Mabel’s Labels on Facebook and Twitter.
OrganicKidz on Facebook and Twitter.
PlaySkool on Facebook and Twitter.
Maclaren on Facebook and Twitter.

Then join us on Tuesday night at 8pm EST at the #BFridayParty and jump right in!
We hope to see you there!!

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More Drop Side Crib’s Recalled!

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

Another recall on drop side cribs has been issued!  Be sure to take a couple minutes to make sure it is not the one you have!

The cribs that have been recalled are :

Victory Land Group’s recalled cribs were sold in natural and white colors. They were manufactured in Vietnam and were sold at Kmart stores nationwide from February 2007 through October 2008 for about $130. The affected model numbers include 07-1248 and 07-1252. The model number can be found on the inner side of the crib’s headboard or footboard on the bottom rail.

Angel Line’s recalled cribs were sold in white, brown, natural and oak colors. They were manufactured in China and were sold online at Ababy.com, Babyage.com and other web retailers from December 2004 through January 2009 for about $140.  The recall includes the following models of Longwood Forest drop-side cribs with plastic drop-side hardware: 6103S, 6105S, 6106S, 6108S, 6109S, 8025P, and 8029P.

Ethan Allen’s recalled cribs were sold in a variety of colors. They were manufactured in the U.S. and China and were sold at Ethan Allen stores from January 2002 through December 2008 for between $550 and $900. The recalled item numbers include 14-5650, 15-5650, 16-5650, 26-5650, 35-5622, 36-5620, 36-5622 and 38-5622. “Ethan Allen” and the item number are printed on a label on the crib’s headboard or footboard.

For contact information in regard to these recalls :

Contact information:

Victory Land Group:

Phone: 866-499-2099

Web site: Victorylandgroup.com

Angel Line:

Phone: 800-889-8158

Web site: Angelline.com

E-mail: parts@angelline.com

Ethan Allen:

Phone: 888-339-9398 (or contact your local Ethan Allen store)

Web site: Ethanallen.com

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