Why Finnish Babies Sleep in Cardboard Boxes?

Una cuna de cartón como regalo para todos los recién nacidos, llena de ropa y objetos útiles para los nuevos padres. Así se hace en Finlandia, pero con una condición...

Eli Rosenberg

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At a glance, it seems a strange place to put a newborn: a bit of bedding and a miniature sleeping bag arranged in a cardboard box

Even so, that’s the first place that many Finnish infants lay their little heads. And the simple setup is believed to be one reason that Finland now has one of the lowest infant mortality rates in the world — 2.52 for every 1,000 births, less than half that of the United States.

the baby box

Finland provides all its mothers-to-be with a baby box, but there are strings attached. To receive it, the mother has to undergo a medical examination during the first four months of pregnancy.

Each year the government gives away about 40,000 boxes, which come with bedding and about 50 other baby items, including clothes, socks, a warm coat and even a baby balaclava for the icy Nordic winter. (Mothers who don’t need all those items can choose to get 140 euros instead.)

safety first

The program started in the late 1930s, when nearly one of out 10 infants in Finland died in their first year. The boxes were a low-cost way to encourage women, especially those at the bottom of the income ladder, to set aside old habits and see a doctor during pregnancy, whether they felt ill or not. The boxes also provided a safe place outside of parents’ beds for infants to sleep, in homes that might have only rudimentary furniture.

a gift to the royals 

Finland also offers considerable protection for the baby’s parents: up to ten months’ paid leave, and a guarantee that whoever stays home with a child can return to his or her job any time before the child turns three.

There are efforts to extend the baby-box idea to a wider audience. Finland sent a kit to Prince William and his wife, the Duchess of Cambridge, in 2013, and a hospital in London recently began giving out the boxes on a trial basis.

going global

In Minnesota, a nonprofit group distributed the boxes to low-income families, inspiring state lawmakers to propose that they be handed out to similar families across the state; a proposal currently under debate. A graduate student at Harvard formed an organization to distribute similar kits in South Asia. And three Finnish fathers have started a business that sells the boxes in countries that do less to support new parents than Finland does. “When you move abroad, you realize that, wow, not every place has a baby box,” said Sanna Kangasharju, who works in the Finnish Embassy in Washington, D.C. “It’s a very efficient system.”

 

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