Resource Center

Stories

The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast.

These stories are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need.

Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Stories are not available for download but can be easily ordered by contacting the Resource Center:



Search results for "SIDS" ...

  • Cradle of Secrets

    The cause of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, which claims the lives of about 100 babies per year in North Carolina, is unknown. Doctors consider it unpreventable and completely natural. However, the investigation finds that about two-thirds of SIDS babies were sleeping in risky situations that may have caused suffocation.

    Tags: SIDS; Sudden Infant Death Syndrome; suffocation; infant death; baby

    By Fred Clasen-Kelly; Karen Garloch; Lisa Hammersly; Franco Ordonez

    Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)

    2010

  • Case Closed: Death in Day Care

    Three-part series on day care by the News & Observer found that "in the past four years, 33 North Carolina children have died in day-care facilities, an average of one death every six weeks. A review of those deaths found that, in some cases, state child-care regulators failed to act despite red flags indicating a day care was unsafe." For this series, the News & Observer looked into deaths that occurred in day care facilities, and discovered some which should have been prevented. The series also deals with unlicensed day care facilities operating across the state, "with little fear of being caught or punished." Additionally, the series looks at the occurences of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), the most common cause of death in day care, and what North Carolina does (or does not) do to reduce the risk of SIDS. For example, despite experts' assertions that "placing babies on their backs can lower the risk," North Carolina day care facilities do not require such steps to be taken.

    Tags: day care; child care; health; SIDS; sudden infant death syndrome; negligence; children; infant; baby

    By Trish Wilson;Craig Jarvis;David Raynor

    News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)

    2003

  • Justice for Justin

    In a four-part series, WKRC investigates the suspicious deaths of children at an in-home day care in suburban Cincinnati. Police responded to two separate incidents of SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) at the day care, and revived another child at the same residence. While the police were suspicious of the deaths, they had nothing to continue their investigation with. The parents of one the children that died came forward and won a wrongful death suit against the day care center, WKRC's investigation found that Ohio has some of most lax licensing, inspection, and enforcement laws in the country when it comes to day cares.

    Tags: TAPE; TRANSCRIPT; day care; children; SIDS

    By Jeff Hirsh;Heff Barnhill

    WKRC-TV

    2001

  • Death of Innocents

    The Post Register investigated child abuse deaths in Idaho, including prevention efforts, death investigations and prosecutions. They found that Idaho children killed in the last four years often showed signs of abuse or neglect before their deaths.

    Tags: SIDS; Coroners

    By Warren Cornwall

    Post Register (Idaho Falls, Idaho)

    1998

  • Vaccination Nation: Children on the frontline

    This Gannett News Service series package takes a detailed look at the public health poilcy concrening immunization. What was found: deserving parents not getting compensation, ignoring dangerous vaccine signs, SIDS relation to vaccine, etc,

    Tags: heatlh care; children; federal government; Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System; Food and Drug Administration

    By John Hanchette;Sunny Kaplan

    Gannett News Service (Arlington, Va.)

    1998

  • Cradle to Grave

    In the 1960s, a Philadelphia couple became the most famous bereaved parents in America as their 10 babies died mysteriously, one after another. Now, a Philadelphia Magazine investigation reveals the deaths were indeed tragic, but perhaps not unexplainable.

    Tags: Noe; SIDS; Murder; Crib death

    By Stephen Fried

    Philadelphia Magazine

    1998

  • The Death of Innocents

    Three years in the making, this book investigates the deaths of five children. Initially, the deaths were said to have been caused by Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, but after some investigation by a District Attorney in Syracuse, N.Y., the it was discovered that the children had been murdered.

    Tags: SIDS BOOK

    By Richard Firstman;Jamie Talan

    Bantam Books

    1997

  • No title (id: 13893)

    For more than two decades, Waneta Hoyt's five children were presumed victims of sudden infant death syndrome. Their case was used in research to prove that SIDS runs in families. In 1994, a forensic pathologist insisted that the study hid homocides.. An investigation led to a confession of murder from Hoyt. "Goodbye, My Little Ones" chronicles the saga. (March 1996)

    Tags: Lighty CAR Goodbye; my little ones Contest entry Medicine Munchausen syndrome by proxy Health 384 pgs. BOOK

    By None

    Onyx, The Penguin Group

    1996

  • Kids Dying Under State Watch

    A record 112 children died in 1995 under the care of Washington state social workers or shortly after the state withdrew services. Nearly all the child deaths were ruled accidental or natural, but a Seattle Times study found at least one third of them might have been preventable. The children who needed the most protection from parental abuse and neglect -- those on the active caseload of Child Protective Service -- were more than four times as likely to die as the state's other children. Infants under CPS care were eight times as likely to die of "SIDS" compared with other infants.

    Tags: CAR; Kids dying under state watch; Contest entry; Child abuse; Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS); Child protective services

    By Wilson

    Seattle Times

    1996

  • False Alarm: The Failed Promise of Apnea Monitors

    The Syracuse Newspapers chronicle the rise and fall of a medical revolution. In 1972 Dr. Alfred Steinschneider, a pediatric researcher at Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse, N.Y., suggested he could predict which babies might die of sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS. Later investigation found Steinschneider's research was invalid and that his theory that SIDS runs in families deflected investigations of cases of suspected serial infanticide. (May 5, 6, and 7, 1996)

    Tags: Lighty CAR False alarm: the failed promise of apnea monitors Contest entry Medical research 31 pgs.

    By Lightly

    Syracuse Newspapers

    1996