Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products, 33022-33072 [2021-12723]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 118 / Wednesday, June 23, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112, 1130, and 1236
[CPSC Docket No. 2017–0020]
Safety Standard for Infant Sleep
Products
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of
2008 (CPSIA), the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is
issuing this final rule establishing a
safety standard for infant sleep
products, which are products marketed
or intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not subject
to any of CPSC’s mandatory standards
for infant sleep. CPSC is also finalizing
an amendment to its regulations
regarding third party conformity
assessment bodies, to include the safety
standard for infant sleep products in the
list of notices of requirements (NORs)
and an amendment to the consumer
registration rule, to identify infant sleep
products as a durable infant or toddler
product subject to consumer registration
requirements, as a subcategory of
bassinets and cradles.
DATES: This rule is effective June 23,
2022. The incorporation by reference of
the publication listed in this rule is
approved by the Director of the Federal
Register as of June 23, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Keysha Walker, Compliance Officer,
U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 4330 East-West Highway,
Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone: 301–
504–6820; email: kwalker@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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I. Statutory Authority and Background
A. Statutory Authority
Section 104(b) of the CPSIA, 15 U.S.C.
2056a(b), requires the Commission to:
(1) Consult with representatives of
consumer groups, juvenile product
manufacturers, and independent child
product engineers and experts, to
examine and assess the effectiveness of
any voluntary consumer product safety
standards for durable infant or toddler
products (15 U.S.C. 2056a(b)(1)(A)); and
(2) promulgate, in accordance with 5
U.S.C. 553, consumer product safety
standards that are substantially the same
as such voluntary standards, or are more
stringent than such voluntary standards
if the Commission determines that more
stringent standards would further
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reduce the risk of injury associated with
such products. 15 U.S.C. 2056a(b)(1)(B).
Additionally, section 104(b)(2) of the
CPSIA directs the Commission to
periodically review and revise the
standards set forth under this
subsection, to ensure that such
standards provide the highest level of
safety for such products that is feasible.
Section 104(d) of the CPSIA requires
manufacturers of durable infant or
toddler products to establish consumer
registration card programs that comply
with CPSC’s implementing rule, 16 CFR
part 1130. Additionally, under section
14 of the CPSA, children’s products
(such as durable infant or toddler
products) must comply with testing and
certification requirements that CPSC
implemented through 16 CFR parts
1107, 1109, and 1110. Section 104(f)(1)
of the CPSIA states that a ‘‘durable
infant or toddler product’’ is a ‘‘durable
product intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by
children under the age of 5 years.’’ Id.
2056a(f)(1). Section 104(f)(2) of the
CPSIA provides a non-exhaustive list of
categories of products that are durable
infant or toddler products, such as cribs,
toddler beds, and bassinets and cradles.
Id. 2056a(f)(2). The Commission’s
consumer registration rule at 16 CFR
1130.2(a) defines a ‘‘durable infant or
toddler product’’ as:
DEFINITION OF DURABLE INFANT OR
TODDLER PRODUCT means the following
products intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by children
under the age of 5 years. The listed product
categories are further defined in the
applicable standards that the Commission
issues under section 104(b) of the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, and
include products that are combinations of [17
listed] product categories. . . .
B. Infant Sleep Products Are Durable
Infant or Toddler Products
This rule establishes a category of
products called ‘‘infant sleep products,’’
which are all products marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not already
subject to a mandatory CPSC sleep
standard. The product category ‘‘infant
sleep products’’ is not included in the
statutory list of products in section
104(f)(2) of the CPSIA. However, similar
sleep products, such as bassinets and
cradles, and cribs, are listed in the
statute; and the Commission has the
authority to add product categories to
the statutory list. The Commission adds
product categories to the list of ‘‘durable
infant or toddler products’’ through a
rulemaking to amend 16 CFR 1130.2,
the Commission’s rule requiring durable
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infant or toddler products to meet
consumer registration rule
requirements. All durable infant or
toddler products identified in § 1130.2
must meet the product registration card
requirement; and because rules issued
under section 104 of the CPSIA are
children’s product safety rules, these
products must also meet the third-party
testing and certification requirements in
section 14 of the CPSA, and
implemented by the Commission in 16
CFR parts 1107, 1109, and 1110.
CPSC issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking in 2017 (the 2017 NPR),
proposing to categorize infant inclined
sleep products as a ‘‘durable infant or
toddler product’’ under section 104 of
the CPSIA, as a subset of the bassinet
and cradle category. 82 FR 16963,
16969–70 (Apr. 7, 2017). In 2019, CPSC
issued a supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking (the 2019 SNPR),
proposing to identify an ‘‘infant sleep
product,’’ a broader category of infant
sleep, as a durable infant or toddler
product under section 104(f) of the
CPSIA, also as a subcategory of
bassinets and cradles. 84 FR 60949,
60957 (Nov. 12, 2019). The 2019 SNPR
proposed to remove the term ‘‘inclined’’
from the proposed mandatory standard,
which included removing the term
‘‘inclined’’ from the title, scope,
introduction, and definitions of ASTM
F3118–17a, and to include within the
rule, instead: ‘‘any infant sleep product
not currently covered by another
mandatory rule for infant sleep
products: Bassinets/cradles, cribs (fullsize and non-full-size), play yards, and
bedside sleepers.’’ 84 FR at 60951.
Accordingly, the 2019 SNPR proposed
that the scope of the rule include two
types of sleep products that are
currently unregulated by CPSC under
any mandatory standard, including
inclined sleep products, meaning infant
sleep products with a sleep surface
angle greater than 10 degrees from
horizontal, and flat (non-inclined) sleep
products, meaning infant sleep products
with a sleep surface angle equal to or
less than 10 degrees.
For this final rule, CPSC will finalize
the definition of an ‘‘infant sleep
product’’ as a durable infant or toddler
product, a category of products that is
a subset of the bassinet and cradle
standard, consistent with the 2019
SNPR. The final rule defines an ‘‘infant
sleep product’’ as ‘‘a product marketed
or intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age,’’ and that is not already
subject to one of CPSC’s mandatory
standards for infant sleep:
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• 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles
• 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standard
for Play Yards, or
• 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers.
As defined in the final rule, an ‘‘infant
sleep product’’ meets the definition of a
‘‘durable infant or toddler product’’
because the products are intended for
infants up to 5 months old, and the
products are ‘‘intended for use,’’ and
‘‘reasonably expected to be used,’’ by
children under 5 years old. Moreover,
products marketed or intended as a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
are similar to the products for infant
sleep that are already included in the
statutory list of durable infant or toddler
products, such as cribs and bassinets
and cradles. We also note that ‘‘infant
sleep products’’ are further defined in
the final rule, as provided in part 1130.
Accordingly, adding ‘‘infant sleep
products’’ as a durable infant or toddler
product is consistent with the
Commission’s approach of adding a
durable infant or toddler product
category that has a mandatory standard
to the list of products in part 1130, to
clarify that these products must meet
the consumer registration rule, and the
third-party testing and certification
requirements for children’s product
safety rules.
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C. Consultation Regarding the
Effectiveness of the Voluntary Standard
To meet the first requirement in
section 104(b) of the CPSIA that the
Commission consult with
representatives of consumer groups,
juvenile product manufacturers, and
independent child product engineers
and experts to examine and assess the
effectiveness of the relevant voluntary
standards, CPSC staff regularly
participates in the juvenile products
subcommittee meetings of ASTM
International (ASTM). Staff’s
participation in ASTM’s voluntary
standards process includes providing
anonymized incident data, participating
in meetings to assess the ability of a
voluntary standard to address the
incident data, and working through the
ASTM process to develop performance
and labeling requirements to address
identified hazards. Staff also comments
or votes on certain ASTM ballots to
revise voluntary standards. ASTM
subcommittees consist of members who
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represent producers, users, consumers,
government, and academia.1
In 2011, ASTM began work on a new
standard for infant inclined sleep
products. Development of this new
ASTM standard for infant inclined sleep
products, F3118, arose from efforts to
update the voluntary standard for
bassinets and cradles. Accordingly,
staff’s consultation process for the
inclined sleep product rulemaking
commenced in approximately 2011,
when ASTM, with CPSC’s concurrence,
decided to separate hammocks and
other inclined sleep products from the
development of the bassinet standard,
ASTM F2194, to develop a new
voluntary standard that would
specifically address the characteristics
of inclined sleep products. For example,
the bassinet standard requires a sleep
surface angle of 10 degrees or less, and
inclined products have a sleep angle
greater than 10 degrees. Since then, staff
has been actively participating in
developing the voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products.
In addition to working on ASTM’s
inclined sleep standard, staff also has
been working with the ASTM
subcommittee developing the bassinet
standard since before 2011, and to this
day, continues to provide incident data
and participate in task group and
subcommittee meetings, including
meetings and ASTM ballots involving
the currently unregulated flat sleep
products within the scope of this final
rule.
Sections V.A.3 and V.B.2 of this
preamble contain additional
information about CPSC staff’s work on
the products within the scope of the
final rule, both inclined and flat sleep
products, through the ASTM standards
development process for the bassinet
and cradle standard, the infant inclined
sleep standard, and a new, unpublished
standard for in-bed sleepers.
D. 2017 NPR and 2019 Termination
Notice
When staff began working on the
mandatory standard for bassinets and
cradles, and participating with the
ASTM standards development
subcommittee, staff considered whether
infant hammocks and other inclined
sleep products should fall within the
scope of the bassinet and cradle
standard. Because the bassinets and
cradles voluntary standard did not
address products on the market that had
a sleep incline greater than 10 degrees,
the Commission directed staff to initiate
a separate rulemaking effort for infant
1 ASTM International website: www.astm.org,
‘‘About ASTM International.’’
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hammocks and other inclined sleep
products, to address the characteristics
of inclined products. Accordingly, the
infant inclined sleep products safety
standard was an outgrowth of the
bassinet and cradle standard, intended
to address products with an incline
greater than 10 degrees from horizontal.
In approximately 2011, at the time
CPSC separated infant inclined sleep
products from the bassinets and cradles
standard, ASTM simultaneously began
work on developing a voluntary
standard for infant inclined sleep
products. ASTM published the resulting
infant inclined sleep products standard
in May 2015, and updated the standard
twice in 2016, and twice in 2017.
ASTM’s latest standard for this product
category is designated, ASTM F3118–
17a, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Infant Inclined Sleep
Products (ASTM F3118–17a).
CPSC’s 2017 NPR proposed a
mandatory standard for infant inclined
sleep products, incorporating by
reference the then-current voluntary
standard, ASTM F3118–17, with a
modification to the standard’s definition
of ‘‘accessory.’’ 82 FR 16964 (April 7,
2017). The 2017 NPR for infant inclined
sleep products, which included
hammocks, discussed 14 fatal incidents
related to infant inclined sleep
products, which were reported to have
occurred between January 1, 2005 and
September 30, 2016. The 2017 NPR
indicated that ASTM F3118–17
addressed the primary hazard patterns
CPSC identified in the 657 incidents
(including 14 deaths), except for the
definition of ‘‘accessory,’’ which was
defined too narrowly to address
potential hazards. Specifically, the 2017
NPR proposed that CPSC’s standard
would not include the term ‘‘rigid
frame’’ in the definition of ‘‘accessory
inclined sleep product’’ in section 3.1.1
of ASTM F3118–17, broadening the
definition to encompass a new product
that did not have a rigid frame. Id. at
16968–69, and 16975. The Commission
concluded that for the mandatory
standard, more stringent requirements
were necessary to further reduce the risk
of injury associated with infant inclined
sleep products relating to the use of an
inclined sleep product accessory. Id. at
16967.
As the 2017 NPR explained, durable
infant or toddler products are children’s
products that must be certified as
complying with all applicable CPSCenforced requirements. 15 U.S.C.
2063(a); 82 FR at 16969. Certification
must be based on testing conducted by
a CPSC-accepted third party conformity
assessment body (test laboratory). 15
U.S.C. 2063(a)(2). CPSC must publish an
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NOR for the accreditation of test
laboratories to assess a product’s
conformity with a children’s product
safety rule. The 2017 NPR proposed that
if issued as a final rule, the new Safety
Standard for Infant Inclined Sleep
Products, to be codified at 16 CFR part
1236, would be added to the list of
NORs for children’s product safety rules
in 16 CFR part 1112, so that test
laboratories applying for CPSC
acceptance could seek accreditation to
test inclined sleep products. 82 FR at
16969. The 2017 NPR also proposed to
amend 16 CFR part 1130, the
Commission’s requirements for
consumer registration for durable infant
or toddler products, to amend the
definition of ‘‘durable infant or toddler
product’’ to clarify that infant inclined
sleep products fall within the term, and
are subject to the consumer registration
card requirements. Id. at 16969–70.
On June 12, 2019, CPSC staff
submitted a briefing package and a draft
Federal Register notice to the
Commission, recommending that the
Commission terminate the 2017 NPR.
Staff recommended terminating the
2017 NPR because, since issuing the
2017 NPR, CPSC had received reports of
42 additional fatalities associated with
rocker-like inclined sleep products, and
because the Commission had issued
additional safety alerts and recalls
involving infant inclined sleep
products. To date, the Commission has
not voted on the notice to terminate the
2017 NPR.
E. 2019 SNPR
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On October 16, 2019, staff provided
the Commission with a briefing package
recommending that instead of
terminating the 2017 NPR, the
Commission issue an SNPR. During the
development of Staff’s 2019 SNPR
Briefing Package, staff received reports
of 451 new incidents; 59 were deaths
that occurred in infant inclined sleep
products. Commission staff contracted
with Dr. Erin Mannen, Ph.D., a
mechanical engineer with a
biomechanics specialization, to conduct
infant testing to evaluate the design of
inclined sleep products. Tab B of the
Staff’s 2019 SNPR Briefing Package
contains Dr. Mannen’s study,
Biomechanical Analysis of Inclined
Sleep (Mannen Study).2
2 The October 16, 2019, Staff Briefing Package:
Draft Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
for Infant Sleep Products under the Danny Keysar
Child Product Safety Notification Act (Staff’s SNPR
Briefing Package) is available at: https://
www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/SupplementalNoticeof
ProposedRulemakingforInfantSleepProducts_10_
16_2019.pdf?TPVAJZEQcz9x9sKeEGlt
m4LskkonxUWv.
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The Commission published an SNPR
on November 12, 2019. 84 FR 60949.
The 2019 SNPR proposed to issue a
standard for ‘‘infant sleep products,’’
meaning products that (1) provide
sleeping accommodations for infants
and (2) are not currently subject to a
CPSC mandatory standard for infant
sleep: Bassinets/cradles, cribs (full-size
and non-full size), play yards, and
bedside sleepers (collectively, CPSC
sleep standards). The 2019 SNPR
proposed to incorporate by reference
ASTM F 3118–17a, with modifications
to require that for each infant sleep
product: (1) The seat back angle
intended for sleep must be equal to or
less than 10 degrees from horizontal,
and (2) must meet the requirements for
a bassinet and cradle in the standard at
16 CFR part 1218. 84 FR at 60956. The
Commission also proposed to amend the
consumer registration rule to identify
‘‘infant sleep products’’ as a category of
durable infant or toddler products under
section 104(f) of the CPSIA, and
proposed to amend the regulation at 16
CFR part 1112, to add infant sleep
products to the list of products that
require third-party testing. Id. at 60957.
F. Overview of the Final Rule
For the final rule, the Commission is
finalizing the requirements largely as
proposed in the 2019 SNPR. The final
rule incorporates by reference the
voluntary standard, ASTM F3118–17a,
Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Infant Inclined Sleep
Products, with modifications to the
introduction, scope, performance, and
testing requirements, to further reduce
the risk of injury associated with infant
sleep products, both flat and inclined.
The final rule requires that ‘‘infant sleep
products,’’ defined as products
marketed or intended to provide a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months of age, and that are not
covered by a CPSC sleep standard, be
tested to confirm the seat back/sleep
surface angle is 10 degrees or less from
horizontal, and meet the requirements
of 16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles, including
conforming to the definition of a
‘‘bassinet/cradle.’’ The scope of the final
rule is also consistent with this
definition of an ‘‘infant sleep product.’’
The final rule specifies CPSC’s sleep
standards as:
• 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles
• 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standard
for Play Yards, or
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• 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers.
Products intended for sleep that already
conform to a CPSC sleep standard in
this list are not within the scope of the
final rule.
The scope of the final rule, and the
definition of ‘‘infant sleep product,’’ are
purposely broader than the scope of the
bassinet and cradle standard, and the
definition of a ‘‘bassinet/cradle,’’ to
capture within the scope of the final
rule all products marketed for infant
sleep for infants up to 5 months old that
are not covered by a CPSC sleep
standard; those that are currently on the
market, and any future products
developed for this age group. CPSC’s
intent is to set a baseline of safety for
infant sleep products so that all of these
products must, at a minimum, meet the
performance and labeling requirements
in 16 CFR part 1218, including
conforming to the definition of a
‘‘bassinet/cradle,’’ and being tested and
certified as meeting these requirements.
Based on the Commission’s review of
inclined and flat sleep product incident
data, and consideration of the comments
on the 2017 NPR and the 2019 SNPR,
the Commission is finalizing the
requirements as proposed in the 2019
SNPR, with the following clarifications
in the:
1. Scope of the final rule, 16 CFR
1236.1, by removing the examples of
infant inclined sleep products, and
aligning the scope of the rule to be
consistent with the definition of ‘‘infant
sleep product,’’ to avoid confusion
about the scope of the rule, which
includes inclined and flat products;
2. Introduction of ASTM F3118–17a,
by explaining more clearly that both
inclined and flat sleep products fall
within the definition of an ‘‘infant sleep
product,’’ and that the purpose of the
rule is to reduce deaths associated with
known infant sleep hazards, including,
but not limited to, seat back or sleep
surface angles that are greater than 10
degrees from horizontal;
3. Scope of ASTM F3118–17a, by
revising section 1.3 to explain more
clearly that inclined and flat products
fall within the scope of the rule, and
that products subject to the rule are
infant sleep products that do not already
meet a mandatory standard for a
product intended for infant sleep.
Consistent with the 2019 SNPR, revised
section 1.3 lists existing infant sleep
standards, but the final rule lists the five
CPSC sleep standards with a reference
to the ASTM standard incorporated by
reference in each mandatory standard;
4. Scope of ASTM F3118–17a, by
adding a new section 1.3.2 stating that
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crib mattresses that meet the voluntary
standard for crib mattresses, ASTM
F2933, are not included within the
scope of the rule. The final rule does not
cover a crib mattress because a crib
mattress is not used by itself, and
instead, is used as the sleep surface in
a crib, a product that already must
conform to a CPSC sleep standard;
5. Referenced documents in ASTM
F3118–17a, by revising section 2.1 to
add the voluntary standard for crib
mattresses, ASTM F2933;
6. Definition of ‘‘infant sleep product’’
in ASTM F3118–17a, by revising section
3.1.7 to remove the phrases
‘‘freestanding’’ and ‘‘generally
supported by a stationary or rocker
base’’ from the definition, to not
inadvertently exclude certain infant
sleep products from the scope of the
rule, such as those that may not initially
have a base, or may be sold as an
attachment to another product.
Additionally, we revised the age limit in
this definition from ‘‘approximately 5
months of age’’ by removing the term
‘‘approximately.’’ This revision is
intended to reduce confusion about
which products fall within the scope of
the rule, and to clarify that any infant
sleep product marketed or intended for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
is not already covered by a CPSC sleep
standard, falls within the scope of the
final rule;
7. Definitions in ASTM F3118–17a, by
revising section 3.1 to remove the
definitions for ‘‘accessory inclined sleep
product,’’ ‘‘compact inclined sleep
product,’’ and ‘‘newborn inclined sleep
product,’’ to simplify the regulation text,
because these definitions are
unnecessary based on the other
modifications made to ASTM F3118–
17a in the final rule, and because these
products are subsumed within the
definition of an ‘‘infant sleep product,’’
and the final rule does not contain any
unique requirements for these
products; 3
8. Requirements in ASTM F3118–17a,
by revising section 6.9 to remove
separate ‘‘Maximum Seat Back Angle’’
tests for three product types (accessory,
compact, and newborn), and leaving
only the test for ‘‘infant sleep products,’’
because all products fall within the
definition of an ‘‘infant sleep product’’
in the final rule, and because this test
is the same for all products;
9. Requirements in ASTM F3118–17a,
by revising section 6.9 and 6.9.1 to more
accurately describe the name of the test
by clarifying that the seat back angle
3 Note that in the 2019 SNPR the Commission
proposed to revise these terms by removing the
word ‘‘inclined.’’
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also refers to a ‘‘sleep surface angle.’’
This revision is intended to reduce
confusion, because flat sleep surfaces do
not have a seat back; and
10. Requirements in ASTM F3118–
17a, by revising section 6.9.3 to remove
the references to accessory, compact,
and newborn sleep products, and to
state that infant sleep products must
meet the requirements of 16 CFR part
1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, including conforming to the
definition of a bassinet/cradle. This
revision is intended to streamline the
regulation text to reduce confusion, and
to add a specific requirement to meet
the definition of a bassinet, which
clarifies that infant sleep products must
have a stand to meet the performance
and labeling requirements in part 1218.
The Commission is also finalizing the
amendment to part 1112, to include
‘‘infant sleep products’’ in the list of
children’s product safety rules for
which CPSC has issued NORs, as well
as the amendment to part 1130, to
identify ‘‘infant sleep products’’
specifically as a subcategory of bassinets
and cradles.
This final rule is based on information
and analysis provided in Staff’s Final
Rule Briefing Package, submitted to the
Commission on May 12, 2021, which
can be found on the Commission’s
website at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fspublic/FinalRuleSafetyStandardfor
InfantSleepProducts.pdf
?7s3LjLlkZ4Vm_0GWP2.vstoEzBylG8xg.
II. Product Description
A. Scope of Products Within the Final
Rule
The scope of products covered by the
2017 NPR tracked the scope of ASTM
F3118–17, covering ‘‘a free standing
product with an inclined sleep surface
primarily intended and marketed to
provide sleeping accommodations for an
infant up to 5 months old or when the
infant begins to roll over or pull up on
sides, whichever comes first.’’ The
scope of products covered by the 2019
SNPR broadened from the 2017 NPR,
proposing to incorporate by reference
ASTM F3118–17a with substantial
modifications, including revisions in
the scope of the standard, section 1.3, to
remove the term ‘‘inclined,’’ and to
include any infant sleep product not
currently covered by another CPSC
mandatory rule for a product intended
for infant sleep: Bassinets/cradles, cribs
(full-size and non-full-size), play yards,
and bedside sleepers. 84 FR at 60951.
For the final rule, the scope of
products that fall within the rule is
consistent with the 2019 SNPR, and
includes all of the inclined sleep
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products in the 2017 NPR, plus
additional products marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not currently
covered by any of the five CPSC sleep
standards. Accordingly, as proposed in
the 2019 SNPR, the final rule includes
the currently unregulated inclined sleep
products, such as frame-type inclined
sleep products, hammocks, compact
inclined sleep products, and accessory
inclined sleep products (collectively,
inclined sleep products). The final rule
also includes the currently unregulated
non-inclined, flat, infant sleep products,
which means products with a seat back
or sleep surface angle that is already 10
degrees or less from horizontal (i.e.,
baby boxes, in-bed sleepers, baby nests
and pods, rigid-sided and rigid-framed
compact bassinets without a stand or
legs, various designs of ‘‘travel
bassinets’’ with soft padded or mesh
sides, and baby tents (collectively, flat
sleep products)). 84 FR at 60951. Tabs
C and E of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing
Package contain additional information
and characteristics, as well as pictures
of the infant sleep products subject to
the final rule.
B. Products Excluded From the Scope of
the Final Rule
Consistent with the 2019 SNPR, for
the final rule, products with inclined or
adjustable seat back positions that are
covered by other CPSC standards, such
as infant bouncer seats, strollers, handheld carriers, frame carriers, and infant
swings, are excluded from the scope of
the ASTM infant inclined sleeper
standard, and they are also excluded
from the scope of the final rule, unless
the product is specifically marketed for
infant sleep for an infant up to 5 months
of age. Id. at 60951–52. If a product’s
packaging, marketing materials, inserts,
or instructions indicate that the product
is for sleep, or includes pictures of
sleeping infants, then CPSC will
consider the product to be marketed for
sleep.
Products that are already compliant
with another CPSC sleep standard, such
as the bassinet standard (16 CFR part
1218), or the crib standard (16 CFR part
1219), are excluded from the scope of
the final rule. Sleep wedge pillows and
sleep positioners are out of scope for the
final rule, and may be covered by Food
and Drug Administration (FDA)
regulations as medical devices, if they
are marketed to treat a medical
condition, such as acid reflux. Infant
pillows are also out of scope for the
final rule, and these products are subject
to 16 CFR § 1500.18, ‘‘Banned toys and
other banned articles intended for use
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by children.’’ Hammocks intended as
photo props are out of scope for the
final rule. Hammock accessories
intended for shopping carts are also not
in scope, as those products are not
intended for infant sleep. Bath chairs
with inclined backs are out of scope, as
they are covered by another standard
and are not intended for infant sleep.
Pet beds, toy hammocks, and play tents
labeled for children over 5 months are
out of scope of the final rule. Loungers,
floor chairs, and rockers are out of scope
of the final rule, unless they are
marketed for infant sleep on the product
itself or its packaging, marketing
materials, inserts, or instructions, or the
product is advertised with pictures of
sleeping infants.
Finally, in response to a comment on
the 2019 SNPR, the Commission
specifically is excluding from the scope
of the final rule crib mattresses that fall
within the scope of the voluntary
standard for crib mattresses, ASTM
F2933. A crib mattress, alone, does not
meet the definition of an ‘‘infant sleep
product,’’ and is always used in
conjunction with a sleep product, such
as a crib or play yard, that falls within
one of CPSC’s sleep standards. The
Commission issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking for crib mattresses in 2020,
and intends to finalize a separate rule
later this fiscal year, providing
performance and labeling requirements
for crib mattresses, based on ASTM
F2933.
C. Market Description 4
Infant sleep products covered by this
rule may be purchased at general
retailers, online retailers, mattress and
bedding stores, and baby specialty
stores. At least 60 small U.S.-based
manufacturers and importers are in this
market, as well as five large domestic
companies, and dozens of foreign
companies, some that ship these items
directly to customers in the United
States via online marketplaces. More
than a thousand home-based
manufacturers, hundreds based in the
United States, sell soft-sided baby nests
and pods, in-bed sleepers, and infant
hammocks directly to consumers via
online marketplaces and as third-party
sellers via major retailers’ websites. We
estimate total sales in this market at
more than $125 million per year, to at
least a third of U.S. households with
newborns.
Products within the scope of the final
rule compete with products for infant
sleep that are compliant with one of
4 Tab E of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package
contains CPSC staff’s analysis of the market for
infant sleep products.
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CPSC’s sleep standards and with other
small, portable products that are not
marketed for sleep. One goal of the final
rule is to make it clearer to consumers
which products are certified as
compliant with a CPSC sleep standard,
regardless of the product name or
advertising.
The proliferation of physically
different products with similar names
(particularly ‘‘bassinets’’), the many
suppliers in the market, and new
product types each season, reflect a
competitive market for innovative sleep
products. New sleep products are
marketed as filling a need for a small,
portable sleeping or napping space.
Many items are also marketed
specifically to facilitate bed-sharing.5 In
addition to the marketing as secondary
sleeping options, some of these compact
and relatively inexpensive sleep
products are also marketed as primary
sleep spaces for families with limited
living space and budget. Baby boxes, inbed sleepers, and hammocks, in
particular, are marketed as primary
sleep spaces for babies.
CPSC did not find any evidence that
consumer demand for compact,
inexpensive, and portable sleep spaces
cannot be met by products compliant
with an existing CPSC sleep standard.
Many small bassinets that are compliant
with CPSC’s bassinet standard sell for
$50 to $75 and have a footprint similar
to the flat sleep products covered by this
rule. As for bed-sharing, bedside
sleepers retail for as little as $100.
Cradles compliant with the bassinet and
cradle standard have a swinging
function similar to a hammock with a
frame, often at a lower retail price.
Innovative products compliant with the
existing CPSC sleep standards have
been introduced in recent years,
including small, foldable play yards,
oval cribs and bassinets, bassinets that
are attached to an adult chair, bassinets
with rocking functions, and bedside
sleepers with a rocking base.
1. Inclined Sleep Products
The 2019 SNPR described four types
of inclined sleep products within the
scope of the rule: Frame-type inclined
sleep products, hammocks, compact
inclined sleep products, and accessory
inclined sleep products. 84 FR at 60951.
We update the market for these products
below, grouping frame-type, compact,
and accessory inclined products into
one category, and hammocks into
another category.
5 Tab D of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package
contains CPSC staff’s analysis of the hazards
associated with bed-sharing.
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(a) Hard-Frame Inclined Sleepers,
Compact Foam Inclined Sleepers, and
Play Yard Accessories
Freestanding, inclined hard-frame
sleepers retail for $40 to $120,
depending on brand and features, such
as attached toys, fabric coverings,
battery-operated sounds, and adjustable
positions. Compact foam inclined
sleepers retail for about $100. Hardframe inclined play yard accessories are
not sold separately; they are included in
the price of the play yard.
In recent years, sales of inclined
sleepers have totaled at least 722,000
units per year.6 The sales of these
products alone total nearly a quarter of
all households with newborn infants,
given that just under 3.8 million live
births occurred in the United States in
2018.7 Additionally, more than 4,000
adoptions from foreign countries
occurred, but most of those infants were
at least 1-year-olds by the time the
adoption was finalized.8 We assume
that some of the market for inclined
sleepers has shifted to other flat sleep
product categories covered by this rule,
or shifted to small portable sleep
products compliant with existing CPSC
sleep standards. Since the CPSC
published the NPR in 2017, some
inclined sleep products have been
recalled or otherwise removed from the
market. However, although reselling
recalled products is prohibited,
discontinued items sold on the
secondary market that have not been
recalled, as well as non-recalled
physically similar products sold by
small companies, are still available.
(b) Baby Hammocks
Hammocks range in price from about
$50 for a simple fabric hammock
without a frame, to more than $300 for
a hammock with a wooden or metal
stand. Crib hammocks, which are
intended to attach to cribs or play yards
of any brand, retail for about $50 to
$100.
Baby hammocks are widely available
from small domestic companies,
importers, and home-based sellers. The
websites of several major general
retailers sell these items from thirdparty sellers. Hammocks are made of a
variety of fabrics and may include
padded sides or bottoms. They may
come without a frame, or with a wooden
6 The recalled inclined products alone had sales
of nearly 6.5 million from May 2010 to August
2019. Assuming that the recalled products
represented most of the market, 6.5 million divided
by 9 years is 722,000.
7 https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/births.htm.
8 https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/
Intercountry-Adoption/adopt_ref/adoptionstatistics-esri.html.
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or metal stand. Some items are solid
fabric, while others are mesh or crochet.
The market is fragmented, and all of the
sellers in the United States are small
companies, although some sellers are
importers of items made by large foreign
companies. The large number of sellers,
including at least one company that
sells only baby hammocks, and dozens
of home-based sellers, suggests that
thousands of baby hammocks are sold
each year.
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2. Flat Sleep Products
(a) Flat Sleep Surface, Soft-Sided
Products
The flat sleep surface, soft-sided
products that are not covered by a CPSC
sleep standard include baby pods or
baby nests, which are marketed for use
on a hard surface or as in-bed sleepers,
and soft-sided ‘‘bassinets.’’ Some softsided products are marketed for use
inside a crib or bassinet. Some sleep
products are marketed as portable or
travel infant beds. The flat infant sleep
products currently not covered by any
voluntary or mandatory sleep standard,
but would be regulated under the final
rule, include:
• Baby pods and baby nests—These
products have a soft floor, usually
padded in some way, with low soft
fabric or mesh sides, resembling a
small pet bed. They can be
rectangular, oval, or figure 8-shaped.
Some come with a wedge pillow.
They are sometimes marketed as
suitable for use inside a crib or play
yard.
• Soft-sided ‘‘travel bassinets’’ or
‘‘travel beds’’—These products can
have either a soft or semi-rigid floor.
Some products come with straps and
zippers so that they can be rolled up
and carried like a backpack when not
in use. Some are marketed as ‘‘3-in-1’’
products that can also be used as a
changing mat and include pockets for
diapers. Some products have a
‘‘cocoon’’ design, with a soft padded
top, intended to cover the body of the
occupant.
• Hand-held carriers marketed for
sleep—These products are marketed
as both a hand-held carrier and a
(soft) bassinet, suitable for napping or
sleeping.
• In-bed sleepers—These products have
low, soft sides and a soft floor,
specifically intended and marketed
for bed-sharing.
Play yard accessories have mesh or
fabric sides that attach to the rails of the
play yard and are marketed for infant
sleep, including ‘‘napping’’; and they
would not fall within the scope of the
rule if they are already compliant with
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the bassinet standard. Items marketed as
changing pads are not considered to be
infant sleep products.
The prices for baby nests, baby pods,
and in-bed sleepers range from about
$40 to $200, with the lower-priced items
tending to come from home-based
manufacturers and foreign direct
shippers, and the more expensive items
coming from larger U.S. companies.
Smaller products intended only for
infants up to 5 months of age also tend
to be cheaper than larger products
intended for children up to 2 years old.
The various soft-sided travel bassinets
and ‘‘travel beds,’’ some that fold up
into a backpack, have a similar price
range. At least 30 small businesses,
mostly importers, sell the soft-sided flat
sleep surface products.9 Dozens of
foreign companies ship these sleep
products directly to U.S. customers via
U.S. Internet retailers, and there are
more than 1,000 home-based sellers of
baby pods and baby nests.
The estimated annual sales of in-bed
sleepers alone are 1 million units,10
based on public comment and staff
analysis. The Durable Nursery Products
Exposure survey (DNPES) indicated that
38 percent of parents slept with their
child under 1 year of age at least once
a week, with 18 percent indicating they
sleep with their child under 1 year of
age every night. The CDC similarly
found 11 that 24.4 percent of parents
bed-shared with their infant ‘‘often or
always’’ and 37 percent indicated they
bed-shared ‘‘rarely or sometimes.’’ If
parents who regularly sleep with their
infants commonly purchase or make a
soft-sided baby nest or other type of inbed sleeper, then these products could
be owned by 25 percent of households
with newborns, representing about 1
million units sold per year, which is
consistent with the estimate from a
public comment on the 2019 SNPR.
(b) Flat Sleep Surface, Rigid-Sided and
Rigid-Framed Compact Bassinets, Travel
Bassinets, and Similar Products
This infant sleep product category
includes flat sleep surface, free-standing
products that resemble a bassinet
without a stand or legs. Baby boxes and
9 This number is approximate, as the proliferation
of internet retailing allows importers to enter and
exit the market quickly, and to switch their product
line based on demand.
10 A public comment on the SNPR estimated the
annual sales of ‘‘in-bed sleep products’’ at 500,000
to 1.5 million units, which is consistent with the
estimates in the DNPES and from CDC on
prevalence of bed-sharing.
11 Bombard JM, Kortsmit K, Warner L, et al., Vital
Signs: Trends and Disparities in Infant Safe Sleep
Practices—United States, 2009–2015. MMWR Morb
Mortal Wkly Rep 2018;67:39–46. DOI: https://
dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm6701e1.
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other rigid-sided products without a
stand are marketed for infant sleep,
sometimes as ‘‘compact’’ or ‘‘travel’’
bassinets. Some compact bassinets have
mesh sides with a rigid metal or plastic
frame. Larger rigid-sided items that
comply with the play yard standard,
and play yard accessories that are
compliant with the bassinet standard,
are out of scope for the final rule. Most
flat sleep surface, rigid-sided products
are rectangular, but oval and round ones
are also available. As noted, some flat,
soft-sided items are also marketed as
‘‘travel’’ bassinets. The term ‘‘bassinet’’
is used in product names for rigid-sided
items with a stand that meet CPSC’s
bassinet standard, but the term is also
used in product names of flat and
inclined items without a stand, some
with low and soft padded sides, which
do not meet the bassinet standard. The
final rule addresses this issue, and, in
part, is intended to make it clearer to
consumers which products are safe for
infant sleep, regardless of the product
name.
Rigid-sided and rigid-framed compact
bassinets and travel bassinets typically
sell for about $50 to $150, which is
comparable to the lower end of the price
range of bassinets that comply with the
bassinet standard. Retail prices for baby
boxes start at about $50 to $75,
depending on the brand and decorative
design, although some are sold only as
part of a $300, or more, bundle with
clothes, diapers, and other baby items.
Baby boxes were given away for free by
some state governments and hospitals,
so the cost to the consumer was $0,
although those organizations purchased
them from a small domestic company
that is no longer offering them. Play
yard accessories are not priced or sold
separately; rather, they are included in
the price of the play yard.
Products in this category have a
variety of names. Several small
domestic manufacturers and small
importers, as well as large domestic and
foreign companies, sell small, rigidsided or rigid-framed products that
resemble a bassinet without a stand as
‘‘compact,’’ ‘‘portable,’’ or ‘‘travel’’
bassinets, or as infant ‘‘travel beds.’’
About a dozen sellers ship these
products from the United States, and a
few foreign companies sell through
internet marketplaces. The presence of
several large domestic and foreign
companies in this market, as well as
introductions of innovative products
each year, indicate that a strong
consumer demand for these products.
CPSC believes it likely that some of the
demand for inclined rigid-sided
products has shifted to this market
sector. Unlike the soft-sided products,
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this sector does not have many homebased businesses or foreign direct
shippers.
Baby boxes are a sub-type of compact
bassinet that are made of cardboard.
They are sold in the United States by
two small domestic companies and one
foreign company and can also be
purchased directly from several foreign
companies. The sales are relatively
small; estimated at under 20,000 per
year.12 This means that less than 1
percent of households with newborns
purchase these items. Baby boxes are
sometimes marketed as ‘‘Finnish’’ baby
boxes, because the government of
Finland provides new parents with a
baby box or cash equivalent. As noted,
in the past, some state and local
hospitals gave away baby boxes to new
parents or made them widely available
through social service agencies.13 Like
other compact bassinets, baby boxes are
marketed as a primary sleep
environment for newborns.
(c) Baby Tents
Baby tents, which are a small mesh or
solid fabric products with a fabric floor
are marketed for sun protection, play,
and baby sleep. They are sometimes
marketed as a combination of tent and
‘‘travel bed’’ or ‘‘travel bassinet.’’ Some
baby tents come with flaps, covers, or
shades so that the baby can sleep in
darkness. Some products come with
poles or stakes to fasten the tent to the
ground or in the sand at the beach.
Some tents have a shallow fillable pool/
sandbox in the bottom, which indicates
they are not intended primarily for
sleep, but rather, for play.
Baby tents retail for about $20 to $75;
larger and more expensive tents are
available, but they are marketed for
older children. Baby tents are offered for
sale on major internet general retailer
websites and in general retail stores by
about a dozen small importers and a few
large companies. Dozens of foreign
companies ship these baby tents directly
to U.S. customers via U.S. Internet
retailers; the majority of suppliers in
this category are foreign direct shippers.
Baby tents are marketed as a specialty
item for outdoor use, particularly beach
trips or camping, to shade the baby from
sun and provide a place for playing and
sleeping. Indoor ‘‘play’’ tents are also
marketed for sleep, but those products
are mostly marketed for children over 3
years of age. Indoor play yards with
tent-like covers are in the scope of the
play yard standard. Although baby tents
12 A public comment estimated 2018 sales from
two of the three U.S. baby box companies at more
than 10,000.
13 Similar programs now offer free cribs or play
yards.
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are a relatively niche product, compared
to some of the other types of sleepers,
there appears to be sufficient demand
for baby tents to support the market
presence of dozens of companies,
including a few large companies selling
a variety of other baby products.
III. Incident Data and Hazard Patterns
A. Inclined Sleep Products
1. Incident Data
The 2017 NPR discussed 14 fatal
incidents related to inclined sleep
products, which were reported to have
occurred between January 1, 2005 and
September 30, 2016. Eight of the 14
deaths involved rocker-like inclined
sleep products; in three cases, the
unstrapped decedent was found to have
rolled over into a facedown position.
Two additional cases also reported a
rollover into a facedown position, but
the reports did not include any
information about the use of a restraint.
CPSC had little information about the
cause or manner of the three remaining
deaths. The 2017 NPR recognized that
reporting was ongoing and that the
number of reported fatalities could
change. 82 FR at 16965–66.
The 2019 SNPR updated fatal and
nonfatal incident reports associated
with the use of an inclined sleep
product. At the time of the 2019 SNPR,
CPSC was aware of 451 incidents (59
fatal and 392 nonfatal) related to
inclined sleep products that occurred
from January 1, 2005 through June 30,
2019, and reported between October 1,
2016 and June 30, 2019. This count
included incidents reported after the
reporting end date stated in the 2017
NPR. Forty-three percent of the incident
reports (196 out of 451) were based
solely on information from
manufacturers/retailers. Various
sources, such as hotlines, internet
reports, newspaper clippings, medical
examiners, and other state/local
authorities provided the remaining
incident reports to CPSC. 84 FR at
60952–53. Tab A of the October 16,
2019 Staff SNPR Briefing Package
describes the incident data and the
hazard patterns associated with infant
inclined sleep products at the time of
the SNPR.
For the final rule, the Directorate for
Epidemiology staff, Tab B of Staff’s
Final Rule Briefing Package, describes
71 new incident reports associated with
inclined sleep products since the 2019
SNPR. Of the 71 new reported incidents,
10 are fatalities; among the remaining 61
nonfatal incidents, 17 reported an
injury. Reporting is ongoing, and
therefore, the number of reported
fatalities, nonfatal injuries, and non-
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injury incidents may change in the
future.
(a) Fatalities
Since the 2019 SNPR, the
Commission is aware of 10 fatalities
associated with the use of an inclined
sleep product that reportedly occurred
during the period from January 1, 2019
through December 31, 2020.
• Three of the 10 fatal reports
describe infants placed supine (on their
back) in a rocker-like sleeper product,
but who ended up rolling over, fully or
partially, resulting in suffocations or
positional asphyxiations. Staff does not
know whether a restraint was used in
any of these cases. All three decedents
were 3- or 4-month-old infants.
• One report describes a fatality
involving a foam-type reclined infant
seat. The seat was placed on an adult
bed, where the parents were also asleep.
The seat was found tipped over on the
floor, with the 4-month-old decedent
found underneath the seat.
• One incident reports a fatality of a
3-month-old infant, found supine in an
infant rocker-like product (in the same
position as originally placed) with a
blanket covering the infant’s face.
• Five remaining fatality reports
provide very little information on the
incidents. Lack of any information on
the circumstances leading up to the
death does not allow CPSC staff to
classify these deaths. Of the known
ages, the decedents ranged in age from
1 to 6 months old.
(b) Nonfatal Incidents
Since the 2019 SNPR, the
Commission has received reports of 61
nonfatal incidents associated with the
use of an inclined sleep product that
occurred between January 1, 2019 and
December 31, 2020. Among these 61
reports, 17 reports involved an injury.
We describe the severity of the 17
injuries below:
• Four infants required hospital
admission. Three of the hospitalizations
were for respiratory problems due to
mold on the sleep product, and one was
for treatment of injuries from a fall
when an accessory-type product
collapsed.
• Three infants were treated and
released from emergency departments.
Those infants were treated for
respiratory problems from exposure to
mold or for fall injuries.
• Ten infants required other medical
care, mostly for plagiocephaly (flat head
syndrome), torticollis (twisted neck
syndrome), or both conditions, which
were associated with prolonged use of
inclined sleep products; two of the 10
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infants suffered minor bumps/bruises
due to falls or near falls.
The remaining 44 incidents reported
no injuries, or provided no information
about any injury. However, many of the
descriptions indicated the potential for
a serious injury, or even death. Thirtyfour percent of the incidents involved
infants 0 to 5 months of age, and 9
percent involved infants 6 months to 12
months of age. CPSC does not know the
infant’s age in 58 percent of the
incidents.
2. Hazard Patterns
The 2017 NPR identified nine hazard
patterns among the 657 reported
incidents associated with inclined sleep
products. These hazard patterns
included: Design issues, lack of
structural integrity, inadequate
restraints, electrical issues, nonproduct-related or unknown issues,
difficulty with correct positioning,
miscellaneous product-related issues,
unspecified falls, and consumer
comments. 82 FR at 16965–66.
For the 2019 SNPR, CPSC staff
considered all 451 reported incidents
(59 fatal and 392 nonfatal) to identify
hazard patterns associated with inclined
sleep products; and staff described the
variety of sleep products considered,
such as: Hammocks, which are
suspended in air, seat-like products
meant to be placed on a floor level (yet
incident reports indicate these products
often were not placed on floor level),
and products that sit on top of larger
nursery products as attachments. CPSC
staff identified eight hazard patterns
among 451 reported incidents in the
2019 SNPR, which differed, depending
on which product was involved, and
how the product was being used: Design
issues, electrical issues, consumer
comments, undetermined issues (due to
confounding information), structural
integrity issues, other product-related
issues, infant placement issues, and
insufficient information. Staff’s
identified hazard pattern categories
were very similar between the 2017 NPR
and the 2019 SNPR. 84 FR at 60952–53.
For the final rule, staff again reports
that the staff-identified hazard
ailments due to the growth of mold on
the product.
The design category includes three
deaths, three hospitalizations, one ED
visit, and eight non-hospitalized, nonED injuries.
(c) Other product-related issues: Four
of the 71 incidents (6 percent) report
other product-related issues, such as
instability (posed by products that have
completely or nearly flipped over) or
lock/latch problem (i.e., the sleep
surface failed to remain in position
during use). One of the three instability
incidents was a fatality that occurred
when a foam-type reclined seat tipped
over and fell from the adult bed to the
floor, trapping the decedent underneath.
No injury is reported in this category.
(d) Lack of structural integrity: Three
of the 71 incidents (4 percent) report
components breaking, such as the rail,
hardware, or other unspecified part.
This category includes one
hospitalization and one non-ED-treated
injury due to a fall.
(e) Electrical issue: One of the 71
incidents (1 percent) describes an odor
emanating from the product after a short
period of use indicative of overheating;
further investigation revealed molten
plastic inside. No injury is reported.
(f) Non-product-related issues: One of
the 71 incidents (1 percent) reports a
fatality in an unsafe sleep environment.
A 3-month-old was placed supine (on
their back) in an infant rocker-like
product with a blanket covering the
face; the decedent was found in the
same position, with the blanket still
covering the face.
(g) Insufficient information: Seven of
the 71 incident reports (10 percent)
contain insufficient information for staff
to categorize them accurately. For five
deaths, staff has no information on the
circumstances of the deaths. Reports for
two injuries in this category describe
unspecified falls treated in hospital EDs,
with no information on restraint usage.
Table 1 presents the distribution of
the 71 reported incidents by hazard
patterns and severity of incidents.
categories for inclined sleep products
are very similar to those identified in
the 2019 SNPR. Following a CPSCissued safety recall on inclined sleep
products in April 2019, staff observed a
surge of reports related to the recall;
these reports are combined with other
consumer comments in the hazard
categories. Staff identified the following
hazard patterns among the 71 reported
incidents (10 fatal and 61 nonfatal)
associated with the use of infant
inclined sleep products. The categories
are presented in descending order of
frequency:
(a) Consumer comments: Thirty-one
of the 71 reported incidents (44 percent)
fall into this category. The reports
consist of consumer comments/
observations of perceived safety
hazards, complaints about unauthorized
sale of infant inclined sleep products, or
inquiries regarding the April 2019 safety
recall on inclined sleep products.
Although one complaint describes a
minor injury incident, none of the
remaining reports indicate that an
incident actually occurred.
(b) Design of the inclined sleep
product: Twenty-four of the 71 reported
incidents (34 percent) fall into this
category.
(i) Ten incidents report that infants
rolled over—fully or partially—from
their original supine (on their back)
position. Although a few of the infants
were strapped into the product, for
others, whether a restraint was used is
unreported. Reports describe infants as
young as 1 month of age rolling over.
Some parents/caregivers, who witnessed
and reported some of the nonfatal
incidents, were able to rescue distressed
infants quickly; some of the other
infants died due to suffocation or
asphyxiation.
(ii) One infant stopped breathing
temporarily, due to difficulty
positioning his head correctly.
(iii) Eight incidents report that infants
developed physical deformations, such
as plagiocephaly (flat head syndrome)
and/or torticollis (twisted neck
syndrome), from extended product use.
(iv) According to five reported
incidents, infants developed respiratory
TABLE 1—HAZARD PATTERNS AND INCIDENT SEVERITY ASSOCIATED WITH INFANT INCLINED PRODUCTS 2019–2020
INCIDENTS
[Reported since 2019 SNPR]
Total incidents
Deaths
Injuries
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Issues
Count
Product-Related ......................................
Comments/Concerns .......................
Design ..............................................
Other Product-Related .....................
Structural Integrity ...........................
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Percentage
63
31
24
4
3
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89
44
34
6
4
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Count
Percentage
Count
Percentage
4
........................
3
1
........................
40
........................
30
10
........................
15
1
12
........................
2
88
6
71
........................
12
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TABLE 1—HAZARD PATTERNS AND INCIDENT SEVERITY ASSOCIATED WITH INFANT INCLINED PRODUCTS 2019–2020
INCIDENTS—Continued
[Reported since 2019 SNPR]
Total incidents
Deaths
Injuries
Issues
Count
Percentage
Count
Percentage
Count
Percentage
Electrical ..........................................
Non-Product-Related ..............................
Unsafe Sleep Environment ..............
Insufficient Information ............................
1
1
1
7
1
1
1
10
........................
1
1
5
........................
10
10
50
........................
........................
........................
2
........................
........................
........................
12
Total ..........................................
71
100
10
100
17
100
Source: CPSC epidemiological databases CPSRMS and NEISS. Percentages may not add to sub-totals and totals due to rounding.
B. Flat Sleep Products
In response to the 2019 SNPR, the
Commission received public comments
regarding the safety of non-inclined
sleep products, or flat sleep products,
that do not fall within an existing CPSC
sleep standard or a voluntary standard
that are available in the marketplace.
Staff completed a review of CPSC’s
epidemiological databases, CPSRMS
and NEISS, to respond to these
comments and concerns.
Flat sleep products include: In-bed
sleepers, baskets (that can function as
hand-held carriers as well), baby boxes,
compact bassinets (most of which are
portable for travel), and baby tents.
Based on the descriptions in the
incident reports received, some have
soft, puffy sides along the sleep area
perimeter; others have semi-rigid sides,
with mesh or soft-padded sidewalls
held in place by tubular structures along
the perimeter. Baby boxes have
cardboard walls, while baby tents have
flexible wires which provide structural
support for fabric/mesh tent walls. All
of these non-inclined sleep products are
flat and come with mattress pads. Some
products have short legs; many can sit
on the floor or can be used on a bed or
a couch. The data show that some
products were placed inside a standardsized crib, play yard, or bassinet.
For the final rule, we characterize the
number of deaths and injuries and the
types of hazards related to flat sleep
products. CPSC’s characterizations are
based on anecdotal incident reports
received by the Commission. The
number of emergency department (ED)treated injuries associated with flat
sleep products, for the covered time
frame, is insufficient to derive any
reportable national estimates.14
Accordingly, we do not present injury
estimates here, but include ED-treated
injuries in the total count of reported
incidents. Moreover, reporting is
ongoing and staff considers 2019–2020
data incomplete, so the number of
reported fatalities, nonfatal injuries, and
non-injury incidents reported here may
change in the future.15
1. Incident Data
CPSC staff received a total of 183
incident reports related to flat sleep
products available in the marketplace.
These incidents reported a date of
occurrence between January 1, 2019 and
December 31, 2020. Manufacturer and
retailer reports submitted through
CPSC’s ‘‘Retailer Reporting Program’’
serve as the only source of information
for 73 percent (133 out of 183) of the
incidents. Of the 183 reported incidents,
11 are fatalities. Among the remaining
172 nonfatal incidents, 16 reported an
injury. Additionally, staff’s flat sleep
product data search was limited to
children age 12 months or under,
because that is typically the
manufacturer-recommended use age for
these products. One hundred and fifteen
incident reports provided the victim’s
age; among them, 24 involved a fatality
or injury. Table 2 provides the age
breakdown among the 183 incident
reports.
TABLE 2—AGE DISTRIBUTION IN FLAT SLEEP PRODUCTS-RELATED INCIDENTS IN 2019–2020
All incidents
Injuries and fatalities
Age of child
Frequency
Percentage
Frequency
Percentage
Unreported * ....................................................................................................
One–Five Months ............................................................................................
Six–Eight Months ............................................................................................
Nine–Twelve Months .......................................................................................
68
89
18
8
37
49
10
4
3
19
4
1
11
70
15
4
Total .........................................................................................................
183
100
27
100
Source: CPSC epidemiological databases CPSRMS and NEISS.
* Age may be ‘‘unreported’’ under two circumstances: age was unknown, or age was not reported, because the incident involved no injury.
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(a) Fatalities
The Commission is aware of 11
fatalities associated with the use of a flat
sleep product, meaning flat sleep
14 According to the NEISS publication criteria, an
estimate must be 1,200 or greater, the sample size
must be 20 or greater, and the coefficient of
variation must be 33 percent or smaller.
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surface products marketed for infant
sleep that are not currently within the
scope of an existing CPSC sleep
standard or a voluntary standard,
reported to have occurred during the
period of January 1, 2019 through
December 31, 2020. Seven of the 11
15 In the reports received by CPSC, consumers
referred to flat sleep products as ‘‘cribs,’’
‘‘bassinets,’’ ‘‘cosleepers,’’ ‘‘cribettes,’’ ‘‘nests,’’
‘‘pads,’’ or ‘‘positioners.’’ Because of the variety of
terms used by consumers to describe these
products—often unfamiliar to CPSC staff—staff’s
data search for this analysis was challenging, and
staff believes it is possible that some relevant
reports may have been missed.
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fatality reports describe a suffocation
death, as follows:
• A 1-month-old was found partially
rolled over onto their side in a softsided compact bassinet/travel bed.
• A 2-month-old infant was found
completely rolled over the edge of an inbed sleeper.
• A 2-month-old was placed in an inbed sleeper, in a prone position,
stomach down, with his face turned to
one side; he was discovered with part of
his body outside the sleeper, face down
into a blanket.
• A 2-month-old infant was put into
a compact bassinet/travel bed placed on
top of an adult bed, with one side of the
compact bassinet/travel bed leaning
against the wall. According to the
official report, the combination of the
travel bed’s non-reinforced flexible
bottom, along with the soft surface of
the adult bed, allowed the infant to sink;
he was found trapped between the bed
and the wall.
• A 3-month-old, in a handheld
basket that was placed on an adult bed,
was found completely rolled over from
her original supine position.
• A 4-month-old was placed on his
back in an in-bed sleeper that was
placed inside a standard bassinet; the
infant was discovered in a prone
position deceased.
• A 7-month-old was wrapped in a
blanket and placed supine in an in-bed
sleeper. The infant was found deceased,
having rolled over into a prone position.
The remaining four fatalities are as
follows:
• A 1-month-old was placed in an inbed sleeper inside a play yard. The
official reports describe the decedent as
having suffocated on the puffy sides of
the sleeper or becoming entrapped
somehow, suffering positional asphyxia.
• A 7-month-old was placed in an inbed sleeper for a nap. According to
official reports, at some point, the infant
got to the edge of the adult bed and
became entrapped between the
footboard and the mattress of the adult
bed and died of positional asphyxia.
• Official reports deemed the cause
and manner of death for two additional
fatalities as undetermined. Both
decedents were 1-month-olds, one
placed in a basket, while the other was
in an in-bed sleeper.
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(b) Nonfatalities
From among the 172 nonfatal reports,
CPSC identified 16 injury reports
associated with the use of flat sleep
products that occurred between January
1, 2019 and December 31, 2020. We
describe the severity of the injury type
among the 16 injuries below:
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• Two infants required hospital
admission. An 8-day-old infant suffered
unspecified breathing difficulties;
another 2-month-old infant fell out of an
in-bed sleeper and suffered head
injuries when a sibling jumped onto the
couch where the in-bed sleeper was
situated.
• Ten infants, ranging in age from 1
month to 9 months, required emergency
department (ED) visits after falling out
of the sleeper product. For most cases,
the sequence of events leading to each
fall was unreported. In two cases, the
infant fell while being transported in the
sleeper; and in another case, the sleeper
slipped off of the adult bed on which it
was placed. The injuries included head
injuries, such as a skull fracture, closedhead injury, and head contusion, or
other injuries, such as face abrasion and
knee contusion.
• Four other injury incidents reported
an allergic reaction; a mold-related
breathing difficulty episode; laceration
of the nose on the rough mesh wall
surface on the sleeper; and a fall when
a sibling pulled on the sleeper, causing
it to flip over. One of these infants
required repeated visits to a medical
professional, but the level of care the
other infants received was unspecified.
The remaining 156 incidents reported
no injuries, or provided no information
about any injury. However, many of the
descriptions were similar to incidents in
which a serious injury or death
occurred. Therefore, CPSC staff
indicated the potential for a serious
injury or even death. Forty-nine percent
of the incidents involved infants 0 to 5
months of age, and 4 percent involved
infants 6 to 12 months of age. The age
was unknown in 37 percent of the
incidents.
2. Hazard Patterns
Similar to the inclined sleep products,
the hazard patterns reported for the flat
sleep products varied according to the
type and usage pattern of the product.
Many of the products are new in the
marketplace, and consumers and safety
advocates expressed concern about their
safety. Staff identified the hazard
patterns among the 183 reported
incidents (11 fatal and 172 nonfatal)
associated with the use of these flat
sleep products. We present the staffidentified hazard patterns below in
descending order of frequency among
the reports.
(a) Lock/Latch problems: One
hundred and fifteen of the 183 reports
(63 percent) fall in this category. All but
one of these reports pertain to different
models of a particular stand-alone
compact bassinet. The locking/latching
mechanism that controls the opening/
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33031
closing of the cover on the product
failed. Some reports describe that the
inability of the cover to open completely
results in the product not lying flat. The
single report about a different product
describes a foldable sleeper not
remaining flat; the unit reportedly folds
up while the baby is in the product.
None of the reports mention any
injuries.
(b) Comments/Concerns: Twenty-nine
of the 183 reports (16 percent) expressed
consumers’ or safety advocates’
concerns about the perceived safety
hazard of a product, non-compliance
with the relevant standard(s) for which
a product is being labeled, and/or
misleading marketing statements about
a product. None of the reports indicate
that an incident actually occurred.
(c) Falls/Containment issues: Twelve
of the 183 incidents (7 percent) report
an infant falling out of the product or an
infant not being kept contained within
the product. Examples include infants
rolling out of a sleeper onto an adult bed
and then onto floor; an infant falling out
of a sleeper when a sibling jumped onto
the couch containing the sleeper; an
infant crawling/rolling (unwitnessed)
out of a sleeper and getting entrapped
between an adult bed frame and
mattress. This category includes one
death, one hospital admission, and nine
ED visits.
(d) Instability issues: Twelve of the
183 reported incidents (7 percent)
describe problems with the product not
remaining stable. The incident reports
describe some products with legs lifting
up higher or leaning on one side; other
products have slipped off or flipped
over from the adult beds/couches on
which they were resting. This category
includes two reported injuries, one
involving an ED visit.
(e) Asphyxiation/Suffocation hazard:
Nine of the 183 indents (5 percent) fall
into this category. The products were
compact bassinets/travel beds, baskets,
as well as in-bed sleepers, one being
used inside a standard bassinet and
another, inside a play yard. All but one
of the infants had rolled over from their
initial position—either fully or partially;
positional information is not available
for one infant. Eight of the incidents
were fatalities due to suffocation or
positional asphyxia; one was a nearsuffocation episode, with a parent
nearby to rescue the infant.
(f) Miscellaneous product-related
issues: Three of the 183 incident reports
(2 percent) are about mold or quality of
the product material. Two of the three
products were in-bed sleepers, and the
third was a compact bassinet/travel bed.
All three report an injury.
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(g) Undetermined issues: In three of
the 183 incident reports (2 percent),
staff could not definitively identify the
issue involved. Two of the incidents
were fatalities; in both cases, CPSC
Field investigation reports indicate that
the cause of death is undetermined. The
third incident resulted in a
hospitalization due to unspecified
breathing difficulties suffered by the
infant.
C. Safety Alerts, Press Releases, and
Product Recalls
The Commission issued two safety
alerts involving infant inclined sleep
products. A May 31, 2018 safety alert 16
advised of infant rollover deaths in
inclined sleep products, and reminded
caregivers to always use restraints and
to stop using the product as soon as an
infant can roll over. An April 5, 2019
safety alert 17 advised consumers to stop
using the inclined sleep product when
an infant reaches 3 months of age, or as
soon as an infant exhibits rollover
capabilities. Since issuing the 2019
SNPR, the Commission issued two press
releases regarding infant inclined sleep
products. A January 16, 2020 press
release warned the public about the risk
of suffocation associated with the
Summer Infant SwaddleMe By Your
Bed Sleeper, an infant inclined sleeper.
The release advised consumers to stop
using the product immediately.18 An
October 31, 2020 press release warned
consumers that infant inclined sleep
products were not safe for infant sleep
based on the results of the Mannen
Study, and advised caregivers to stop
using infant sleep products with an
inclined seat back of more than 10
degrees.19
The Commission also conducted
numerous recalls involving infant
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16 https://www.cpsc.gov/content/cpsc-consumeralert-caregivers-urged-to-use-restraints-withinclined-sleep-products.
17 https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/NewsReleases/2019/CPSC-ALERT-CPSC-and-FisherPrice-Warn-Consumers-About-Fisher-Price-Rock-NPlay-Due-to-Reports-of-Death-When-Infants-RollOver-in-the-Product.
18 https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/NewsReleases/2020/CPSC-Warns-Consumers-to-StopUsing-Summer-Infant-USA-Inc-s-SwaddleMe-ByYour-Bed-Sleeper.
19 https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/NewsReleases/2020/CPSC-Cautions-Consumers-Not-toUse-Inclined-Infant-Sleep-Products.
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inclined sleep products. The 2019 SNPR
stated that from May 10, 2000 to August
20, 2019, CPSC conducted 13 consumerlevel recalls involving infant inclined
sleep products. 84 FR at 60953–54.
CPSC conducted recalls in response to
hazards involving strangulation,
suffocation, falls, structural stability,
entrapment, exposure to mold, and
death. Six recalls involved infant
hammocks, six recalls involved infant
inclined sleep products, and one recall
involved an infant inclined sleep
accessory included with a play yard. Id.
Tab G in the October 2019 Staff SNPR
Briefing Package contains a detailed
chart outlining recalls involving infant
inclined sleep products up through
August 20, 2019.
Since the issuance of the 2019 SNPR,
CPSC conducted six additional recalls
for a suffocation hazard involving infant
inclined sleep products. These six
recalls affected approximately 268,300
units. Tab F of Staff’s Final Rule
Briefing Package contains a chart
outlining these recalls. CPSC did not
conduct any recalls for flat sleep
products from August 2019 through
January 2021.
IV. Overview of CPSC Sleep Standards
The final rule would require that any
‘‘infant sleep product,’’ defined as a
product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for
an infant up to 5 months old, and that
is not already subject to one of CPSC’s
mandatory standards for infant sleep,
must meet the requirements of the
mandatory standard for bassinets and
cradles, 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
including conforming to the definition
of a ‘‘bassinet/cradle.’’ Currently, the
five mandatory CPSC sleep standards
are: 20
• 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles
• 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standards
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standards
for Play Yards, and
20 Tab E of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package
contains a description of each CPSC sleep standard
and the associated voluntary standard the rule is
based upon.
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• 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers.
The Commission considers products
that fall within the scope of a CPSC
sleep standard to generally follow safe
sleep principles. Additionally,
caregivers can expect that regulated
products intended for infant sleep are
tested for compliance to the applicable
standard, as well as to any other
applicable CPSC rule, such as lead in
paint and lead content. Pursuant to
section 14 of the CPSA, products within
the scope of a children’s product safety
rule, which includes all of CPSC’s sleep
standards, must be tested for
compliance to the standard by a CPSCaccepted third party laboratory, and
such compliance must be certified by
the manufacturer or importer of the
product. Staff regularly participates in
ASTM subcommittees for these
products, and routinely updates
incident data associated with regulated
products, to address identified hazards
through the ASTM process. If a
voluntary standard that has been
adopted by the Commission is revised to
address identified hazards, section
104(b)(4)(B) of the CPSIA provides an
update process, whereby the revised
voluntary standard becomes the new
mandatory standard.21 Additionally,
section 104(b)(2) of the CPSIA requires
the Commission to periodically review
and revise rules issued under section
104, to ensure that such rules provide
the highest level of safety for such
products that is feasible. Table 3
summarizes CPSC sleep standards
applicable to regulated infant sleep
products.
21 Under section 104(b)(4)(B) of the CPSIA, the
organization must notify the Commission of a
revised voluntary standard, and the revised
standard becomes a consumer product safety
standard issued by the Commission unless within
90 days after notification, the Commission
determines that the revised standard does not
improve the safety of the consumer product covered
by the standard, and the Commission is retaining
the existing consumer product safety standard. The
revised voluntary standard will become the
mandatory standard, effective 180 days after the
Commission received notification of the revision (or
a later date specified by the Commission in the
Federal Register). 15 U.S.C. 2056a(b)(4)(B).
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33033
TABLE 3—REGULATED INFANT SLEEP PRODUCTS AND APPLICABLE STANDARDS
Product
Voluntary standard
Bassinet/Cradle ................................................................................................................................
Full-Size Crib ...................................................................................................................................
Non-Full-Size Crib ...........................................................................................................................
Play Yard .........................................................................................................................................
Bedside Sleeper ..............................................................................................................................
Some products currently marketed or
intended for infant sleep are not
regulated by one of the five existing
CPSC sleep standards. Additionally,
new products continue to enter the
market for infant sleep, but some are
also not within the scope of an existing
CPSC sleep standard. Such products
may not follow safe sleep principles,
and are not tested for compliance to a
CPSC sleep standard. These unregulated
sleep products collectively include
products such as: Infant inclined sleep
products, in-bed sleepers, baby boxes,
compact/travel bassinets without
handles or handholds, and infant travel
tents. Hand-held bassinet/cradles are
regulated as part of 16 CFR part 1225,
Safety Standard for Hand-Held Infant
Carriers, but part 1225 does not address
hazards associated with infant sleep.
Accordingly, hand-held carriers are
unregulated if marketed or intended for
infant sleep.
The final rule seeks to address
hazards associated with infant sleep
products, both inclined and flat.
Products that already meet a CPSC sleep
standard are, by definition, outside the
scope of the rule. The final rule
addresses hazards associated with infant
sleep products by requiring them to
meet the requirements of the bassinet
and cradle standard, 16 CFR part 1218,
including conforming to the definition
of a ‘‘bassinet/cradle.’’
V. Voluntary Standards Overview—
ASTM F3118 and ASTM F2194
A. Infant Inclined Sleep Products—
ASTM F3118
1. History
As a result of incidents associated
with the use of inclined sleep products,
the Commission directed CPSC staff to
work with ASTM to develop voluntary
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22 CPSC’s
mandatory standard, 16 CFR part 1218,
Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
incorporates by reference ASTM F2194–13,
Standard Consumer Safety Specification for
Bassinets and Cradles, with modifications to make
the standard more stringent. In 2016, ASTM revised
the voluntary standard to include the modifications
set forth in the mandatory standard. Accordingly,
ASTM F2194–16e1 is substantially similar to the
mandatory standard, and we assess this version of
the voluntary standard in this preamble, to simplify
our analysis.
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ASTM
ASTM
ASTM
ASTM
ASTM
F2194–16e1 22
F1169–19 .......
F406–19 .........
F406–19 .........
F2906–13 .......
Mandatory standard
16
16
16
16
16
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
CFR
1218.
1219.
1220.
1221.
1222.
2. Description
The 2017 NPR described the key
provisions of ASTM F3118–17,
including: Scope, terminology, general
requirements, performance
requirements, test methods, marking
and labeling, and instructional
literature. 82 FR at 16967. The 2019
SNPR proposed to incorporate by
reference the most recent version of the
voluntary standard, ASTM F3118–17a,
which is substantially the same as
ASTM F3118–17, except that the
‘‘accessory’’ definition was updated to
match the modification recommended
in the 2017 NPR. Like the previous
version, ASTM F3118–17a describes the
scope of the voluntary standard, defines
terms for various types of infant
inclined sleep products, and sets out
requirements for performance (such as
for structural integrity and stability) and
for warnings and instructions. As
discussed elsewhere in this preamble,
CPSC’s final rule makes substantial
modifications to ASTM F3118–17a.
standard to address hammocks and
inclined sleep products, whose product
characteristics at that time did not
appear to align with bassinets, because
the bassinets standard requires a sleep
surface of 10 degrees or less, while the
inclined product category at that time
included products with an incline of 10
to 30 degrees. Staff has been actively
participating in the development of the
voluntary standard for inclined sleep
products since then.
CPSC staff participated in the ASTM
process by attending meetings,23
working on task groups, commenting on
ballots,24 and providing incident data.
CPSC staff provided incident data and
hazard pattern analysis associated with
inclined sleep products for the 2017
NPR and the 2019 SNPR, and updated
this information in this final rule
preamble. Additionally, staff last
provided ASTM with incident data
associated with inclined sleep products
in May 2018.
Since the SNPR published on
November 12, 2019, ASTM has not
updated ASTM F3118–17a to address
hazards associated with inclined
products. Staff’s SNPR Briefing Package
was posted on the Commission’s
website on October 16, 2019, before
ASTM held fall meetings on voluntary
standards for juvenile products, and
before the Commission voted on the
SNPR, so that ASTM members and other
stakeholders could review the package,
including the Mannen Study, before the
ASTM meetings, and so that staff could
discuss the package and the Mannen
Study with ASTM members. The ASTM
Agenda for Infant Inclined Sleep
Products meeting that occurred on
October 21, 2019, included a link to
Staff’s SNPR Briefing Package. CPSC
staff discussed the 2019 SNPR Briefing
3. CPSC Staff’s Work Within the ASTM
Process
CPSC staff’s work on the infant
inclined sleep product voluntary
standard arose from staff’s work through
the ASTM process on the voluntary
standard for bassinets and cradles in
approximately 2011, in preparation for
a proposed rule on bassinets and
cradles. ASTM began developing the
infant inclined sleep products voluntary
23 Meeting logs detailing CPSC’s work with ASTM
on the infant inclined sleep product voluntary
standard can be found here: https://www.cpsc.gov/
Newsroom/FOIA/ReportList?field_nfr_date_value
%5Bvalue%5D%5Bmonth%5D=&field_nfr_date_
value_1%5Bvalue%5D%5Byear%5D=&field_nfr_
type_value=meeting&title=incline&=Apply.
24 CPSC staff’s correspondence with ASTM since
issuing the 2017 NPR regarding these products can
be found on www.regulations.gov under supporting
materials: https://www.regulations.gov/docket/
CPSC-2017-0020/document?documentTypes=
Supporting%20%26%20Related%20Material.
requirements to address the hazard
patterns related to the use of inclined
sleep products. ASTM first approved
ASTM F3118 on April 1, 2015, and
published it in May 2015. Through the
ASTM process, CPSC staff consulted
with manufacturers, retailers, trade
organizations, laboratories, consumer
advocacy groups, consultants, and
members of the public. The current
standard, ASTM F3118–17a, was
approved on September 1, 2017, and
published in October 2017. This is the
fourth revision of the standard since it
was first published in May 2015. ASTM
F3118–17a states that it is intended to
address hazards from falls, positional
asphyxiation, and obstruction of nose
and mouth by bedding.
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Package at the ASTM meetings in
October 2019, including the ASTM
subcommittees for infant inclined sleep
products, in-bed sleepers, and bassinets,
discussing the Mannen Study findings,
as well as addressing the fact that flat
sleep products were covered by the
SNPR. Dr. Mannen attended the
subcommittee meeting for infant
inclined sleep products via telephone,
to discuss the Mannen Study and to
answer questions.
After the SNPR published in the
Federal Register on November 12, 2019,
CPSC staff urged the ASTM
subcommittee for ASTM F3118 to meet
and discuss how to address issues
presented in the 2019 SNPR. However,
the F3118 subcommittee did not meet
again until August 26, 2020, following
a July 16, 2020 letter from CPSC staff.25
After staff’s letter, the ASTM F3118
subcommittee established a task group
to revise the infant inclined sleep
standard’s title, introduction, and scope,
to be more in line with the proposal in
the 2019 SNPR. In December 2020, the
ASTM subcommittee introduced ballot
F15–18 (20–1) to change the standard’s
title, introduction, and scope to include
all infant sleep products (and not just
inclined sleep products). The ballot
sought to:
• Remove the word ‘‘inclined’’
throughout the standard.
• Include in the scope, products
intended for infants up to 12 months
old.
• Include in the scope, products
marketed or intended to provide
sleeping accommodations.
• Change the scope to include all infant
sleep products that do not fall within
the scope of an existing infant sleep
product standard:
D Full-Sized Cribs (F1169)
D Bassinets (F2194)
D Bedside Sleepers (F2906)
D Non-Full-Size Cribs/Play Yards
(F406)
• Exempt crib mattresses from the scope
of the standard.
• Limit the sleep surface in all positions
to be 10 degrees or less.
However, in January 2021, the ballot did
not pass due to six negative votes. The
negative votes objected to a variety of
different aspects of the ballot, including
four broad categories:
1. That the proposal would discourage
innovation and be too broad;
2. That the ballot appeared to allow
products that fall under other sleep
standards to opt to meet ASTM F3118
instead;
25 Available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/
IISPLettertoASTM-07162020.pdf?6ntZUkyau.r2mlr
QnM31s0B3g1EkUg.9.
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3. That the voter could not support
changing the title, introduction, and
scope without seeing the underlying
requirements; and
4. Editorial comments.
The ASTM F3118 subcommittee
discussed the ballot results at a meeting
on January 27, 2021. During this
meeting, ASTM members disagreed on
the intent and consequences of changes
to the voluntary standard, and the
meeting ended without a consensus on
a path forward. However, CPSC staff
participates on an ASTM task group to
review safe sleep requirements across
infant sleep product standards (the
comparison task group), and reports that
this task group has met at least four
times since the January 27, 2021
meeting. Based on the ballot results and
the discussions in these ASTM
meetings, staff advises that it is unlikely
that ASTM will be able to move forward
with changes to ASTM F3118 that
address safe sleep requirements in the
near term.26
Recently, on April 22, 2021, at an
ASTM task group meeting on the title,
introduction, and scope of the voluntary
standard, task group members discussed
balloting the proposed regulatory text in
the 2019 SNPR for the voluntary
standard, to prevent the sale of infant
inclined sleep products that purport to
certify to ASTM F3118–17a, meaning
products with an incline above 10
degrees, while ASTM works to revise
the voluntary standard to be more in
line with the 2019 SNPR. However, the
task group does not plan to ballot the
2019 SNPR requirement that infant
sleep products meet the requirements of
the bassinet standard, because ASTM is
working to create minimum safe sleep
requirements in a revised ASTM F3118
standard. Staff is participating in this
effort as well, but staff has advised the
task group that staff’s expertise does not
suggest that requirements that are
different and less stringent than the
requirements in the bassinet standard
will adequately address the risk of
injury associated with infant sleep
products. Additionally, staff’s
conclusion that the Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles contains the
26 The ASTM task group approach is different
than CPSC’s approach in this final rule, because
ASTM is attempting to put safe sleep requirements
in ASTM F3118, rather than rely on the
performance and labeling requirements in the
bassinets and cradles standard. The Commission
determines in this final rule that the performance
and labeling requirements in the bassinet standard
are the minimum safe sleep requirements for infant
sleep products. Thus, it remains unclear whether
ASTM’s approach can be successful. However, if
the ASTM committee revises ASTM F3118–17a and
notifies the Commission, the staff will evaluate the
revised voluntary standard at that time.
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minimum safe sleep requirements for
these products is supported by the
assessment presented in Staff’s Final
Rule Briefing Package and in this final
rule.
B. Bassinets and Cradles—ASTM F3194
1. History and Description
The voluntary standard for bassinets
and cradles, ASTM F2194, was first
approved and published by ASTM in
2002, as ASTM 2194, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for
Bassinets and Cradles. The voluntary
standard was revised several times
between 2002 and CPSC’s promulgation
of a mandatory standard for bassinets in
2013. CPSC’s mandatory standard for
bassinets and cradles, codified at 16
CFR part 1218, incorporates by
reference ASTM F2194–13, with the
following modifications to the voluntary
standard:
1. Clarify the scope of the standard to
include multi-mode products in which
a mode meets the definition of a
‘‘bassinet/cradle’’ (seat incline is 10
degrees or less from horizontal)
2. Modify the stability test procedure
to require the use of a newborn CAMI
dummy, rather than an infant CAMI
dummy.
3. Add stability requirements for
removable bassinet beds.
4. Add more stringent mattress
flatness performance requirements to
limit measured angle to 10 degrees
(versus 14 degrees allowed in ASTM
F2194–13).
5. Exempt bassinets that are less than
15 inches across from the mattress
flatness requirement.
In 2016, ASTM approved and
published the most recent version of the
standard, ASTM F2194–16e1, with new
requirements to bring the voluntary
ASTM standard in line with the
mandatory standard for bassinets in 16
CFR part 1218. In developing ASTM
F2194–16e1, ASTM harmonized the
voluntary standard with all
modifications specified in part 1218. In
addition to including all modifications
contained in part 1218, ASTM added:
1. Additional clarification that
strollers with a removable bassinet must
be tested to the bassinet standard,
2. Minor formatting and editorial
changes, and
3. An additional warning statement to
be applied to bassinet bed products that
are removable from the base/stand
without the use of tools and that contain
a lock/latch mechanism that secures the
bassinet bed to the base/stand.
Staff assessed the additional changes to
the voluntary standard, beyond
harmonization with 16 CFR part 1218,
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and advises that the changes are either
non-substantive, or an improvement in
safety. We evaluate and discuss ASTM
F2194–16e1 in this preamble to the final
rule, and CPSC will update the
reference in part 1218 to ASTM F2194–
16e1 as soon as feasible.
The more significant requirements of
ASTM F2194 include:
• Scope—describes the types of
products intended to be covered under
the standard.
• Spacing of rigid-side components—
is intended to prevent child entrapment
between both uniformly and nonuniformly spaced components, such as
slats.
• Openings for mesh/fabric—is
intended to prevent the entrapment of
children’s fingers and toes, as well as
button ensnarement.
• Static load test—is intended to
ensure structural integrity even when a
child three times the recommended (or
95th percentile) weight uses the
product.
• Stability requirements—is intended
to ensure that the product does not tip
over when pulled on by a 2-year-old
male.
• Sleeping pad thickness and
dimensions—is intended to minimize
gaps and the possibility of suffocation
due to excessive padding.
• Tests of locking and latching
mechanisms—is intended to prevent
unintentional folding while in use.
• Suffocation warning label—is
intended to help prevent soft bedding
incidents.
• Fabric-sided openings test—is
intended to prevent entrapments.
• Rock/swing angle requirement—is
intended to address suffocation hazards
that can occur when latch/lock
problems and excessive rocking or
swinging angles press children into the
side of the bassinet/cradle.
• Occupant restraints—is intended to
prevent incidents where unused
restraints have entrapped and strangled
children.
• Side height requirement—is
intended to prevent falls.
• Segmented mattress flatness—is
intended to address suffocation hazards
associated with ‘‘V’’ shapes that can be
created by the segmented mattress folds.
The voluntary standard also includes:
(1) Torque and tension tests to prevent
components from being removed; (2)
requirements for several bassinet/cradle
features to prevent entrapment and cuts
(minimum and maximum opening size,
small parts, hazardous sharp edges or
points, and edges that can scissor, shear,
or pinch); (3) requirements for the
permanency and adhesion of labels; (4)
requirements for instructional literature;
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and (5) corner post extension
requirements intended to prevent
pacifier cords, ribbons, necklaces, or
clothing that a child may be wearing
from catching on a projection. 78 FR
63019, 63020–21 (Oct. 23, 2013).
2. CPSC Staff’s Work Within the ASTM
Process
CPSC has been working with ASTM
on the voluntary standard for bassinets
and cradles since before publication of
the original voluntary standard in 2002.
CPSC began rulemaking under section
104 of the CPSIA, to create a mandatory
standard for bassinet and cradles based
on the voluntary standard, in
approximately 2009, following passage
of the CPSIA. CPSC issued a notice of
proposed rulemaking in 2010 (75 FR
22303 (Apr. 28, 2010)), a supplemental
notice of proposed rulemaking in 2012
(77 FR 64055 (Oct. 18, 2012)), and a
final rule in 2013 (78 FR 63019 (Oct. 28,
2013)). The final rule is codified at 16
CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles. The final rule
incorporated by reference the thencurrent voluntary standard, ASTM
F2194–13, with modifications to make
the standard more stringent.
CPSC staff has continually
participated in the ASTM process,
including attending subcommittee
meetings,27 participating in task
groups,27 commenting and voting on
ballots to revise the voluntary
standard,28 and providing incident data,
when requested. This has included
ASTM’s recent efforts to address
hazards associated with currently
unregulated flat sleep products, such as
compact bassinets, baby boxes, and inbed sleepers, since approximately 2015.
ASTM has not yet been successful in
adding any of these flat sleep products
to the bassinet standard.
CPSC staff’s correspondence with
ASTM states that staff is opposed to
removing or reducing the requirements
of the bassinet and cradle voluntary
standard to create new requirements
specifically for these products, when
such requirements are inconsistent with
safe sleep principles already required in
the bassinet standard. Accordingly, for
example, in a December 12, 2019 letter
to both the inclined sleep and bassinet
27 CPSC meeting logs associated with staff’s work
with ASTM can be found here: https://
www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/FOIA/ReportList?field_
nfr_date_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bmonth%5D=&
field_nfr_date_value_1%5Bvalue%5D%5Byear
%5D=&field_nfr_type_value=meeting&title=
bassinet&=Apply.
28 CPSC correspondence with the ASTM
Subcommittee for Bassinets and Cradles can be
found here: https://cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/Vote
CommentToASTMBassinet_10162020.pdf
?NbTgq8p5FBJ12mr1IAQeG0weJUDh_6ZI.
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subcommittees, CPSC staff reiterated
concerns with weakening the safe sleep
requirements in the voluntary standard
for bassinets and cradles in order to
accommodate unregulated products,
such as in-bed sleepers, compact
bassinets, and baby boxes.29
Additionally, on October 16, 2020, staff
voted negatively on an ASTM ballot to
modify the bassinet standard to include
less stringent stability and side height
requirements for compact bassinets,
versus traditional bassinets.30 To ensure
safe sleep, staff’s negative ballot vote
urged ASTM to maintain the same side
height and stability requirements for
compact bassinets that are required of
bassinets.
In June 2019, ASTM began to develop
a separate in-bed sleeper voluntary
standard. Staff provided data to ASTM
regarding in-bed sleepers in 2017, and
has participated in ASTM meetings for
in-bed sleepers since June 2019, as well
as working with performance and
labeling task groups.31 Task groups
working on the in-bed sleeper standard
have been unable to reach consensus on
performance requirements for in-bed
sleepers, and have been focusing on
developing warning labels for these
products. CPSC staff continues to
participate in all of these ASTM efforts,
and to urge ASTM members to retain
safe sleep principles in standards
development. For example, in a July 8,
2020 letter to the Subcommittee
Chairman for ASTM’s in-bed sleeper
committee, CPSC staff stated:
We would like to be clear that based on our
evaluation of incident data related to in-bed
sleepers, we have great concerns regarding
the safety of in-bed sleepers and the
feasibility of developing any safety standard
that fully addresses potential hazards. Based
on the 12 deaths discussed with the In-bed
Sleeper Data Task Group members, CPSC
staff cannot foresee how these products can
be designed and regulated to ensure safe use
for infants. Staff is not confident that an inbed sleeper voluntary standard that differs
29 Available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/
LetterToASTMBassinet_IISP_121219.pdf?uMq_
ImMYhtrDmFkoDH9I6vdwNI0hsm00.
30 Available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/
VoteCommentToASTMBassinet_10162020.pdf
?NbTgq8p5FBJ12mr1IAQeG0weJUDh_6ZI. CPSC’s
website, at https://www.cpsc.gov/Regulations-Laws-Standards/Voluntary-Standards, contains
information on staff activities as well as
correspondence with voluntary standards
organizations.
31 Meeting logs describing ASTM meetings are
available on CPSC’ website: https://www.cpsc.gov/
Newsroom/FOIA/ReportList?field_nfr_date_value
%5Bvalue%5D%5Bmonth%5D=&field_nfr_date_
value_1%5Bvalue%5D%5Byear%5D=&field_nfr_
type_value=meeting&title=in-bed&=Apply.
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 118 / Wednesday, June 23, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
from the current bassinet standard will result
in a safe sleep product.32
VI. Assessment of the Voluntary
Standards To Address Identified
Hazard Patterns Associated With Infant
Sleep Products
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A. Inclined Sleep Products
The 2019 SNPR assessed the
adequacy of ASTM F3118–17a to
address the risk of injury associated
with inclined sleep products. 84 FR
60955–56. The assessment relied, in
part, on the Mannen Study regarding the
safety of inclined sleep surfaces for
infant sleep, attached as Tab B to Staff’s
SNPR Briefing Package, and also
summarized in the 2019 SNPR. Id. at
60954. Based on the Mannen Study,
CPSC staff advised that a flat sleep
surface, meaning one that does not
exceed 10 degrees from the horizontal,
is the safest sleep surface for infants. Id.
Accordingly, the Commission proposed
in the 2019 SNPR to remove the term
‘‘inclined’’ in CPSC’s mandatory
standard, and to require that all sleep
products not otherwise subject to a
CPSC sleep standard (full-size cribs,
non-full-size cribs, play yards, bedside
sleepers, and bassinets and cradles),
meet the requirements of 16 CFR part
1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, which, among other
requirements, mandates a seat back/
sleep surface angle intended for sleep to
be 10 degrees or less from horizontal. Id.
Here, we summarize the results of the
Mannen Study again, summarize the
assessment of ASTM F3118–17a in the
2019 SNPR, and update our assessment
to determine whether the voluntary
standards, ASTM F3118–17a, or ASTM
F2194–16e1, are adequate to address the
incidents associated with inclined sleep
products, including the 71 new
incidents reported since the 2019 SNPR.
Based on the following analysis, the
Commission determines that ASTM
F3118–17a is inadequate to address the
risk of injury associated with inclined
sleep products, and that more stringent
requirements are necessary in the final
rule to further reduce the risk of injury
associated with infant inclined sleep
products. Specifically, the Commission
determines that the performance
requirements in the mandatory
standard, 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
would adequately address the risk of
injury associated with these products.
32 See July 8, 2020 Letter from C. Kish to ASTM
Subcommittee for In-bed Sleepers, available at:
https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/InbedSleepers_
07082020ASTM%20Letter.pdf?3SpzS3cG3zv
PjCLFamcCz.9FxNjpUu2s.
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1. Mannen Study Summary
During the development of the 2019
SNPR, staff reviewed 450 incidents, 59
were deaths that occurred while in
infant inclined sleep products.
Commission staff contracted with Dr.
Erin Mannen, Ph.D., a mechanical
engineer with a biomechanics
specialization, to conduct infant testing
to evaluate the design of inclined sleep
products. The Mannen Study examined
how the degree of a seatback angle
affects an infant’s ability to move within
the products and whether those designs
directly impact safety or present a risk
factor that could contribute to the
suffocation of an infant. The testing
compared infants’ muscle movement
and oxygen saturation on a flat crib
mattress at 0 degrees, 10 degrees, and 20
degrees, versus seven different inclined
sleep products. The Mannen Study
concluded that none of the inclined
sleep products tested were safe for
infant sleep. Id.
The Mannen Study concluded that
muscle activity for infants who rolled
over in inclined sleep products with a
20-degree incline sleep surface was
significantly different than in products
with a zero-degree incline surface. The
increased demand on the abdominal
muscles could lead to increased fatigue
and suffocation if an infant is unable to
reposition themselves after rolling from
a supine to prone position. The Mannen
Study also concluded that inclined
sleep products with a 10-degree or less
sleep surface incline do not significantly
impact infant motion or muscle activity.
Based on the Mannen Study, staff
recommended that 10 degrees is the
maximum sleep surface angle that
should be allowed for any product
intended for infant sleep, similar to the
requirements found in the EN 1130:2019
children’s cribs, EN 1466:2014 carry
cots, and the AS/NZS 4385:96 infant
rocking cradles international standards.
Id.
2. Hazard Pattern Categories
In the 2019 SNPR, CPSC reviewed 451
reported incidents involving inclined
sleep products, which included 59
fatalities and 96 injuries. CPSC
identified seven hazards that involved
deaths and injuries (for this analysis, we
did not consider patterns, such as
consumer comments, that did not
involve injuries or deaths):
• Design issues (31 percent). This
hazard involved 19 deaths, 17 resulting
from infants rolling over into a prone
(face down) position. An additional 71
injuries were reported in this category,
including five hospitalizations and four
emergency department visits. Thirty-
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three percent of the reported incidents
involved infants rolling from their
original supine (on their back) position.
• Electrical issues (28 percent). This
hazard involved no deaths and two
reports of injuries.
• Undetermined (8 percent). This
hazard involved 28 deaths and six
injuries. Among the 28 deaths, staff was
unable to determine the product’s role,
but often unsafe sleep environment was
cited as a co-contributing condition to
sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
• Structural Integrity (6 percent). This
hazard involved no deaths and two
injuries.
• Insufficient information (4 percent).
This hazard involved eight deaths and
six injuries. The reports did not provide
information on the circumstances of
deaths and injuries involved
unspecified falls.
• Other Product-Related Issues (3
percent). This hazard involved no
deaths and nine injuries. The category
includes reports of instability (product
tipping over) and inadequacy of
restraints, and most of the injuries
involved falls.
• Infant placement issues (1 percent).
This hazard involved four deaths and no
injuries. Three of the four deaths
involved infants placed in a prone
position.
Id. at 60952–53.
Since the 2019 SNPR, CPSC received
a total of 71 new incident reports related
to inclined sleep products. While the
distribution of the data in this update
varies somewhat, staff advises that the
broader hazard categories are very
similar. The 71 new reports included 10
fatalities and 17 injuries. Of the 10
fatalities, three deaths involved an
infant who rolled from a supine
position, one death involved an
overturned sleeper, one death involved
an infant placed with a blanket, and five
deaths without reports containing
information on the circumstances of the
death. Of the 17 injuries 12 involved
design issues, two involved structural
integrity, and two involved unspecified
falls.
3. Assessment of ASTM Standards in
Addressing Hazards
Below we summarize the hazard
patterns associated with deaths and
injuries from all 522 incident reports
related to inclined sleep products CPSC
received and reviewed since the 2017
NPR. CPSC did not consider patterns,
such as consumer comments, that did
not involve injuries or deaths. The 522
incidents involved 69 deaths and 113
injuries. We assesses the adequacy of
the voluntary standard for infant
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inclined sleep products (ASTM F3118)
and the adequacy of the voluntary
standard for bassinets (ASTM F2194) in
addressing hazards associated with
injuries and deaths.
In the 2019 SNPR, CPSC determined
that the voluntary standard for infant
inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118–
17a, is inadequate to address the risk of
injury associated with the incline of
sleep products, because the standard
allows for products with a seatback
angle greater than 10 degrees. Id. at
60955–56. The majority of deaths (in
which the circumstances were known)
were due to suffocation after the infant
rolled over in the product, and the same
hazard pattern was reported in nonfatal
incidents. For the mandatory standard,
CPSC proposed to modify ASTM
F3118–17a to limit the seatback angle
for all infant sleep products to 10
degrees or less, and to replace the
performance requirements with the
performance requirements in 16 CFR
part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets
and Cradles, which incorporates by
reference ASTM F2194–13 Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for
Bassinets and Cradles, with
modifications. With the modifications
in the mandatory standard, the standard
is substantially similar to ASTM F2194–
16e1, which we use for the assessment
here.
(a) Hazard: Design Issues
When combining the data from the
2019 SNPR with new incident data
received since the SNPR, the ‘‘design
issues’’ hazard is associated with 22
deaths and 83 injuries. At least 20
deaths involved infants rolling into a
prone position (face down) and
suffocating. More than one-third of the
incidents also reported that infants
rolled over—fully or partially—from
their original supine (on their back)
position.
In the 2019 SNPR, we concluded that
a flat sleeping surface that does not
exceed 10 degrees from horizontal offers
infants the safest sleep environment.
This conclusion was based on findings
from the Mannen Study. 84 FR at
60955–56. Although some comments to
the 2019 SNPR stated that more testing
should be done to determine if the
maximum angle for safe sleep may be
between 10 degrees to 20 degrees, the
Mannen Study suggested if future work
were done on safe sleep angles, one area
of study would be additional
biomechanical testing to determine
‘‘which, if any, angles between 10- and
20-degrees may be safe for infant sleep.’’
The Mannen Study recommendations
do not imply that an incline angle
between 10 and 20 degrees may be safe
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for infant sleep, merely that if higher
angles are considered, additional
biomechanical testing is required. The
Mannen Study also stated that its testing
of awake infants was a limitation
because ‘‘while the muscle use and
motion may be similar, it is likely that
infants who find themselves in a
compromised position in an inclined
sleep product during a nap or overnight
sleep may not have enough energy or
alertness to achieve self-correction and
may succumb to suffocation earlier or
more easily than infants who are fully
awake.’’
Given the vulnerability of newborn
infants and infant fatalities who were
most likely asleep at the time of
incidents in inclined products, we
conclude that additional research of
inclines above 10 degrees is
unnecessary for the final rule. Based on
the biomechanical results of the
Mannen Study, and its conclusion that
10 degrees is likely a safe incline for
infant sleep, which supports the 10
degrees stated in the scope of ASTM
F2194–16e1, the Commission concludes
that 10 degrees is the maximum sleep
surface angle that should be allowed for
any product intended for infant sleep
for young infants up to 5 months old.
Additionally, other research 33 has
demonstrated a discernable difference
in infant ability between 5, 7, and 10
degrees in a side-to-side tilt, which
formed the basis of the 7-degree
maximum sleep surface angle in Health
Canada’s regulations. Staff advises that
additional research at angles higher than
10 degrees is unlikely to alter their
assessment that 10 degrees is the
maximum safe incline for infant sleep.
The current voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products, ASTM
F3118–17a, defines an ‘‘inclined sleep
product,’’ in part, as having a seatback
angle greater than 10 degrees and not
exceeding 30 degrees. Based on the
Mannen Study and the other factors
discussed above, we conclude that
ASTM F3118–17a does not adequately
address the risk of injury related to a
sleep surface incline greater than 10
degrees, because the voluntary standard
does not limit the sleep surface to a safe
incline angle. In comparison, the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194–16e1, defines a sleep surface as
being less than or equal to 10 degrees,
and includes performance requirements
for mattress flatness that limit measured
angles to 10 degrees or less.34 Therefore,
for the mandatory standard specified in
this final rule, with respect to sleep
surfaces, all infant sleep products,
including inclined sleep products, must
meet the more stringent sleep surface
angle requirement of the voluntary
standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194–
16e1, as codified in 16 CFR part 1218,
to further reduce the risk of death from
suffocation.
33 Beal SM, Moore L, Collett M, Montgomery B,
Sprod C, Beal A. The danger of freely rocking
cradles. J Paediatr Child Health. 1995 Feb;31(1):38–
40. doi: 10.1111/j.1440–1754.1995.tb02910.x. PMID:
7748688.
34 In the final rule for bassinets, the Commission
stated they intended to limit the scope of the
bassinet standard to exclude all inclined products
‘‘when the incline is more than 10 degrees from
horizontal.’’ 78 FR 63,021.
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(b) Hazard: Undetermined Product Issue
This hazard category is associated
with 28 deaths and six injuries. Among
the 28 deaths and six injuries, staff was
unable to determine the product’s role.
Without information on the product’s
role in deaths or injuries, we are unable
to assess whether the voluntary
standard for infant inclined sleep,
ASTM F3118–17a, or the voluntary
standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194–
16e1, would adequately address the
hazards in this category.
(c) Hazard: Insufficient Information
This hazard category is associated
with 13 deaths and eight injuries. The
reports did not provide information on
the circumstances of deaths and injury
reports involving unspecified falls.
Without information on the
circumstances of deaths or injuries, staff
is unable to assess if the voluntary
standard for infant inclined sleep,
ASTM F3118–17a, or the voluntary
standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194–
16e1, would adequately address the
hazards in this category. Falls are
discussed in more detail in ‘‘Other
Product-Related Issues,’’ below.
(d) Hazard: Infant Placement
This hazard category is associated
with five deaths and no injuries. Three
of the deaths involved infants placed in
a prone position, and one death
involved an infant placed in a supine
position with a blanket covering the
face. Based on the Mannen study, sleep
surfaces with a 20-degree incline
significantly increased the demand on
abdominal muscles and could lead to
increased fatigue and suffocation if an
infant is unable to reposition themselves
after rolling from a supine to prone
position. In three of the deaths in this
hazard category, the infant was placed
in the prone position and the inclined
sleep surface may have contributed to
suffocation if the angle of the sleep
surface led to fatigue that prevented the
infant from rolling to a supine position.
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While infants can die in flat products
when placed to sleep in the prone
position, based on the Mannen Study,
an inclined surface could further
contribute to deaths in the prone
position. A sleep surface limited to a 10degree or less incline, as required in the
bassinet standard (ASTM F2194–16e1),
could reduce the risk of injury
associated with the prone position,
when compared to an inclined sleep
product. Therefore, with respect to sleep
surfaces, for the mandatory rule, all
infant sleep products, including
inclined sleep products, must meet the
more stringent sleep surface angle
requirement of the voluntary standard
for bassinets, ASTM F2194–16e1, as set
forth in 16 CFR part 1218, to further
reduce the risk of death from
suffocation.
(e) Hazard: Other Product-Related Issues
(Instability, Restraints, etc.)
This hazard category includes reports
of instability (product tipping over) and
containment; the category is associated
with one death and nine injuries. One
death occurred when a foam-type
reclined product tipped over and fell
from the adult bed to the floor, trapping
the infant underneath. Most of the
injuries involved falls and at least 10
reports (with no injury reported) related
to nearly or completely flipped over
products.
The death, and most likely the
injuries, relate to the stability of the
product and how easy it is to tip the
product over into a hazardous situation.
The voluntary standard for infant
inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118–
17a, includes two stability performance
requirements that apply to ‘‘Compact
Inclined Sleep Products’’ and ‘‘Infant or
Newborn Inclined Sleep Products.’’ For
the ‘‘Compact Inclined Sleep Products,’’
the product must remain upright when
placed on a 20-degree inclined test
platform. For the ‘‘Infant or Newborn
Inclined Sleep Products,’’ a 23-lb.
vertical force and 5-lb. horizontal force
are applied to the product’s side with a
newborn CAMI dummy occupant to
simulate an older sibling pulling up on
the side to view the infant in the
bassinet, and the product must remain
upright containing the CAMI dummy.
The ‘‘Compact Inclined Sleep Products’’
are exempt from the 23- and 5-pound
force requirements, with the rationale
that the compact products are intended
to sit on a floor and are unlikely to have
an older sibling attempt to pull up to see
the infant inside.
The current voluntary standard for
bassinets, ASTM F2194–16e1, includes
an identical stability requirement that
applies a 23-lb. vertical force and a 5-
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lb. horizontal force to the product with
a newborn CAMI dummy occupant, and
this requirement applies to all products;
it does not provide exemptions for
‘‘Compact Inclined Sleep Products’’ to
meet only the less stringent 20-degree
inclined test platform test. The rationale
in ASTM F2194 states the dual
application of forces simulates a 2-yearold male pulling on the side of the
product; staff advises that sibling
interaction is a reasonable scenario
which may cause the product to tip
over. Due to the portability of some of
the unregulated compact sleep products,
incident data confirm that the products
are used on raised surfaces from which
infants and product may fall. Therefore,
regarding the product’s stability, in the
final rule, all infant sleep products,
including inclined products, must meet
the more stringent stability requirement
of the voluntary standard for bassinets,
ASTM F2194–16e1, as codified in 16
CFR part 1218, to further reduce the risk
of injury from tip over of the product.
(f) Hazard: Structural Integrity
This hazard category includes reports
of some component failures on the
product such as buckles/straps,
hardware coming loose, hub/rail/leg
coming loose, or other unspecified
components breaking. This hazard
category involved no deaths and four
injuries. All injuries were related to
falls, and include one hospitalization
and three emergency department visits.
The voluntary standard for infant
inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118–
17a, includes performance requirements
to assess the integrity of inclined sleep
products. The requirements specify a
dynamic test in which an 18-lb. load,
consisting of a 6- to 8-inch steel shot
bag, is dropped 50 times from a height
of 1.0 inch onto the seat surface. The
requirements also specify a static test in
which a 50-lb. load or three times the
product’s maximum recommended
weight, whichever is greater, is
gradually applied through a 6-inch
square wooden block to the seat surface
for 60 seconds. The current voluntary
standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194–
16e1, has a performance requirement to
address structural integrity that
specifies a static load test that applies a
54-lb. load or three times the
manufacturer’s recommended weight,
whichever is greater, through a 6-inch
aluminum block to the sleep surface for
60 seconds. The rationale in ASTM
F2194 states 54 lbs. is three times the
weight of the 95th percentile of a 3- to
5-month-old infant.
Although the voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products, ASTM
F3118–17a, requires a dynamic test for
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structural integrity, its effectiveness in
evaluating the product’s strength is
minimal, compared to the static test.
The load in the dynamic test being onethird of the static load, the low drop
height, short test timeframe, and
presence of energy-absorbing material
(shot bag and flexible product material),
combine to minimize the effect of this
test on the product’s structural integrity.
In contrast, the static test applies a
much larger load, three times the
heaviest infant in the product, with a
rigid applicator applied continuously
for 60 seconds. Therefore, staff advises
that the static test is the more stringent
evaluator of product integrity than the
dynamic test.
The static load in ASTM F2194–16e1
is 54 lbs., which is a more stringent load
compared to the static load of 50 lbs. in
ASTM F3118–17a. Therefore, to further
reduce the risk of injury associated with
structural defects, for the final rule, the
Commission concludes that the static
load test in ASTM F2194 is adequate to
assess structural integrity of infant sleep
products, and is more stringent than the
static load test in ASTM F3118–17a.
The final rule requires that all infant
sleep products, including inclined sleep
products, meet the more stringent
structural integrity requirement of the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194–16e1, as codified in 16 CFR part
1218.
(g) Hazard: Electrical Issues
This hazard category involved no
deaths and two reports of injuries
related to electric shock. Non-injury
incidents reported overheating/melting
of components and issues with batteries.
As noted in the 2019 SNPR, the infant
inclined sleep products standard, ASTM
F3118–17a, does not include any
performance requirements for electrical
components. 84 FR at 60956. The
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194–16e1, also does not address
electrical hazards. However, CPSC staff
advises that they raised this issue with
ASTM, and that the ASTM Ad Hoc task
group is developing performance
requirements to address electrical
hazards across juvenile products. As
these electrical requirements are added
during the ASTM voluntary standard
updates, CPSC can review the updated
voluntary standard pursuant to the
update provision in Public Law 112–28,
and determine whether to revise the
mandatory standard based on a revised
voluntary standard.
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4. Assessment of International
Standards
(a) EN1466:2014 Carry Cots
The BS EN 1466:2014 Child use and
care articles—Carry cots and stands—
Safety requirements and test methods
European standard applies to products
intended for carrying a child in a lying
position using a handle or stand. This
standard applies to children who cannot
sit unaided or roll over or push up on
their hands and knees and is a
maximum weight of 19.84 pounds.
i. Side Height
For cots on a stand, EN 1466:2014
standard requires an internal height of
at least 7.87 inches (200 mm) from the
top of a mattress, compressed by a
19.84-pound (9kg) steel plate, to the
lowest point of the upper edge of the
sides. For carry cots not on a stand, the
standard requires an internal height 5.9
inches (150mm) to 7.09 inches
(180mm), depending on the length of
the cot, using the same test method.
This requirement measures the internal
side height when an occupant of the
maximum weight compresses the
mattress. This standard has a side height
requirement similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard, which
requires a minimum side height of 7.5
inches from an uncompressed mattress.
For bassinets on a stand, if the mattress
compresses more than 3⁄8 of an inch,
ASTM F2194–16e1 requires a higher
side. For bassinets not on a stand,
ASTM F2194–16e1 has a higher side
height of 7.5 inches from an
uncompressed mattress, compared to
the EN 1466:2014 requirement, which is
7.09 inches from a compressed mattress.
Additionally, ASTM F2194–16e1
requires a consistent side height no
matter the configuration.
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ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The EN 1466:2014 standard requires a
maximum sleep surface angle of 10
degrees. This requirement is similar to
the ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard, which requires a maximum
sleep surface angle of 10 degrees.
iii. Latching Requirements
The EN 1466:2014 standard requires
products with a folding stand
mechanism not to collapse after the
latch is operated (closed and opened)
300 times, and after a 44.96 pound-force
(200N) is applied in the area of the
stand most likely to cause the product
to fold. The EN 1466:2014 standard’s
latching requirement only simulates the
action of unintentionally folding the
stand without the carry cot or box
assembled on the stand. In contrast, the
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ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet standard
tests both the stand and the bassinet as
a fully assembled product.
The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard requires products without a
latching or locking device not to fold
when a 20 pound-force is applied to the
top edge of the bassinet in the direction
most likely to cause it to fold. The
ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet standard
requires a lower force than the EN
standard, but the force is applied at a
higher location (top side of the bassinet)
than the EN standard (force applied to
the stand). The higher location of the
force can create a higher torque at the
latch due to the longer lever arm. For
bassinets with a locking hinge or latch,
the locking mechanism must withstand
a 10-pound force in the direction most
likely to release it. Determining which
latching requirement is more stringent is
difficult because the test parameters are
not directly comparable. Staff assesses
that testing the product fully assembled,
as required by ASTM, is a better test
because it simulates realistic use of the
product.
The ASTM standard also includes a
Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment to
Base/Stand requirement and testing to
address latching and locking devices
intended to secure removable bassinet
beds to the base/stand. These
requirements and test are unique
because they address known incidents
of false latching of a removable bassinet
bed. By considering the latching,
unintentional folding, and bassinet bed
attachments to the stand requirements
in total, staff assesses that the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard’s latching
requirements are adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The EN1466:2014 standard requires
products with an occupant test mass of
15.43 pounds not to tip over when
placed on a 20-degree surface.
EN1466:2014 rationalizes this test by
stating: ‘‘Carry cots shall be designed so
that they do not tip over when they are
placed on slightly sloping ground or
when the child leans against one side of
the carry cot.’’ This is different
compared to the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinet standard that requires the
product (with simulated newborn
occupant) to withstand a 23-lb. vertical
force and 5-lb. horizontal force along its
side, without tipping. The rationale in
ASTM F2194 states the dual application
of forces simulates a 2-year-old male
pulling on the side of the product; staff
advises that this is a reasonable scenario
in which the product may tip over.
Determining which stability
requirement is more stringent is
difficult, because both standards’ torque
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33039
arms depend upon the product’s
geometry. Using a 10-inch wide by 10inch tall sidewall box on a 10-inch
stand as a reference product for
comparison, staff determined the
reference product would fail the ASTM
F2194 bassinet standard’s test and pass
the EN 1466 standard’s test. Therefore,
staff assesses that the ASTM 2194–16e1
bassinet standard’s stability requirement
is more stringent for this reference
product.
v. EN1466:2014 Summary
The EN 1466:2014 carry cots standard
has a side height and sleep surface angle
requirement similar to ASTM F2194–
16e1’s bassinet standard. However, the
ASTM F2194–16e1 standard has a
potentially more stringent stability
requirement.
(b) EN 1130:2019 Children’s Cribs and
Cradles
The European Standard, EN 1130–1:
2019 ‘‘Furniture—Cribs and Cradles for
Domestic Use’’ has several requirements
not found in ASTM F2194–16e1. Most
of these additional requirements address
hazards associated with cribs intended
for use with older children (in excess of
the 5-month recommended maximum
age for bassinets); and thus, these
requirements are not applicable to
bassinets.
i. Side Height
The EN 1130:2019 standard requires a
side height of at least 7.87 inches (200
mm) when a 19.84-pound (9kg) steel
plate is placed on the compressed
mattress. This measures the crib’s
internal side height with a 19.84-pound
occupant is compressing the mattress.
This standard has a side height
requirement similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard, which
requires a minimum side height of 7.5
inches from an uncompressed mattress.
If the mattress compresses more than 3⁄8
of an inch, ASTM F2194–16e1 requires
a higher side.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The EN 1130:2019 standard requires a
maximum sleep surface angle of 10
degrees. This standard has a sleep
surface angle requirement similar to the
ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet standard,
which requires a maximum sleep
surface angle of 10 degrees.
iii. Latching Requirements
The EN 1130:2019 standard requires
folding products to contain a dualaction locking mechanism, and to
unlock with a tool, and to fold only
when the crib is lifted, or not collapse
after the latch is operated (closed and
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opened) 300 times, and at least an
11.24-pound force (50N) is required to
unlock it. The EN 1130:2019 standard’s
latching requirement only simulates the
action of unintentionally folding the
product’s folding or adjustable legs,
while the ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard tests both the standard and the
bassinet as a fully assembled product.
The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard requires products without a
locking mechanism to withstand a 20pound force applied to the top edge of
the bassinet in the direction most likely
to cause it to fold. For products with a
locking hinge or latch, the locking
mechanism must withstand a 10-pound
force in the direction most likely to
release it. Staff’s assessment is that
testing the product fully assembled, as
required by ASTM, is a better test
because it simulates realistic use of the
product.
The ASTM standard also includes a
Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment to
Base/Stand requirement and testing to
address latching and locking devices
intended to secure removable bassinet
beds to the base/stand. These
requirements and the test are unique
because they address known incidents
of false latching of a removable bassinet
bed. By considering the latching,
unintentional folding, and bassinet bed
attachments to the stand requirements
in total, staff assesses that the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard’s latching
requirements are adequate.
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iv. Stability Requirements
The EN1330:2019 standard requires
products not to tip over when a 19.87pound weight is placed on one side of
the crib, while on the opposite side’s
top rail, a 6.74 pound-force is
horizontally applied towards the
weight. This test is similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard with
reasonably similar forces. EN1330:2019
rationalizes the test, stating the product
‘‘should remain stable when the child
moves in the crib or when the crib
swings along the amplitude permitted
by the suspension device.’’ ASTM
F2194–16e1 is based on U.S. incident
data of a 2-year-old sibling pulling over
a bassinet, which is a more severe
condition than an infant moving within
the product. Therefore, staff concludes
the ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard’s stability requirements are
adequate.
v. EN 1130:2019 Summary
The EN 1130:2019 children’s cribs
and cradle standard has side height,
sleep surface angle, and stability
requirements similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard; however,
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the ASTM F2194–16e1 standard has a
more extensive and stringent latching
requirement.
(c) AS/NZS 4385:1996 Infant’s Rocking
Cradles
The Australian/New Zealand standard
(AS/NZS 4385:1996) contains
requirements for rocking and swinging
angles used to develop some of the
ASTM F2194–12 requirements. The
ASTM rock/swing rest angle
performance requirement is more
stringent because the occupant
surrogate, a CAMI dummy, is placed
against the sidewall, resulting in higher
rest angles.
i. Side Height
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard
requires a minimum side height of 11.81
inches (300 mm) between the top of the
mattress support to the top edge of the
lowest rocking cradle’s side. The
maximum mattress thickness the AS/
NZS standard permits is 2.95 inches
(75mm). Therefore, the minimum side
height between the top of the mattress
and the top edge of the lowest side is
8.85 inches. This is similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard, which
requires a minimum side height of 7.5
inches between the top of the mattress
and the top of the lowest sidewall.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard
requires the mattress angle on rocking
cradles without a self-leveling device
not to exceed 5 degrees and 10 degrees
on rocking cradles with a self-leveling
device. This is similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard, which
requires a maximum sleep surface angle
of 10 degrees.
iii. Latching Requirements
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard does
not contain any latching requirements to
address the unintentional folding
hazard. The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard is more stringent because it
requires products without a locking
mechanism to withstand a 20-pound
force without folding, or a 10-pound
force for hinges with locking
mechanisms. The ASTM F2194–16e1
also addresses the false latching of a
removable bassinet bed with
requirements including an automatic
locking latch or a false latch indicator.
iv. Stability Requirements
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard
requires a product not to tip over when
a 19.84-pound (9 kg) weight is on the
mattress and a 4.49-pound force (20N) is
applied horizontally to the uppermost
rail. This test is similar to the ASTM
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F2194–16e1 bassinet standard, which
requires the product (with simulated
newborn occupant) to withstand a 23pound vertical force and 5-lb. horizontal
force along its side, without tipping.
The rationale in ASTM F2194 states the
dual application of forces simulates a 2year-old male pulling on the side of the
product; staff concludes that this is a
reasonable scenario in which the
product may tip over.
v. AS/NZS 4385:1996 Summary
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 infant’s
rocking cradle standard has a side
height, sleep surface angle, and stability
requirement similar to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard.
However, the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinet standard has a more stringent
latching requirement.
(d) Canadian Standard (SOR/2016–152)
Cribs, Cradles, and Bassinets
The Canadian standard (SOR/2016–
152) includes requirements for cribs,
cradles, and bassinets. Staff focused
their analysis on the requirements for
‘‘bassinets,’’ which are defined as
providing sleeping accommodations for
a child with sides to confine the child,
and a sleep surface area less than or
equal to 4000 cm2 (620 in2).
i. Side Height
The Canadian standard requires a
minimum side height of 230 mm (9.05
inches), measured from the mattress
support. Because ASTM F2194–16e1
allows a bassinet mattress of 1.5 inches,
measuring from the upper surface of the
mattress support to the upper surface of
the side would be 1.5 inches greater
than measuring from the upper surface
of an uncompressed mattress. Therefore,
staff advises that the 7.5-inch side
height, from the upper surface of an
uncompressed mattress, is functionally
equivalent to the 9-inch side height,
measured from the upper surface of the
mattress support in the Canadian
standard.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The Canadian standard requires the
sleep surface angle not to exceed 7
degrees, which is based on a 1995 study
that demonstrated a discernable
difference in infant ability between 5, 7,
and 10 degrees in a side-to-side tilt.
Staff advises they understand that
Health Canada selected 7 degrees and
applied it to all sides of the product,
regardless of head-to-toe or side-to-side
tilt. The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets
standard allows for a side-to-side resting
angle of 7 degrees for rocking cradles,
and limits head-to-toe angle to 10
degrees. As discussed in section
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VI.A.3(a) of this preamble, based on the
Mannen Study and other factors, the
Commission concludes that a flat
sleeping surface that does not exceed 10
degrees from horizontal offers infants
the safest sleep environment.
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iii. Latching Requirements
The Canadian standard requires
folding products to contain an autolocking mechanism that requires a dualsimultaneous action to disengage and
that does not fold when a 52.91-pound
(24kg) load is applied on any area most
likely to damage the mattress support.
While the Canadian standard requires
an auto-locking mechanism that
requires a dual-simultaneous action to
disengage, it also tests the latching
strength by loading the mattress
support. The ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinet standard requires that products
without a latching or locking device not
fold when a 20-pound force is applied
to the top edge of the bassinet in the
direction most likely to cause it to fold.
The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard requires a lower force than the
Canadian standard, but the force is
applied at a higher location (top side of
the bassinet) than the Canadian
standard (force applied to the mattress
support). The higher location of the
force could create a greater torque at the
latch, due to the longer lever arm. For
bassinets with a locking hinge or latch,
the locking mechanism must withstand
a 10-pound force in the direction most
likely to release it. Determining which
latching requirement is more stringent is
difficult because the test parameters are
not directly comparable.
The ASTM standard also includes a
Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment to
Base/Stand requirement and testing to
address latching and locking devices
intended to secure removable bassinet
beds to the base/stand. These
requirements and test are unique
because they address known incidents
of false latching of a removable bassinet
bed. By considering the latching,
unintentional folding, and bassinet bed
attachments to the stand requirements
in total, staff assesses that the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard’s latching
requirements are adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The Canadian requirement in
Schedule 11, Test for Stability of
Cradles, Bassinets, and Stands, of their
regulation is substantially equivalent to
the requirement in ASTM F2194–16e1.
The requirement specifies that the
product (with a simulated newborn
occupant) must withstand a 10-kg
(approximately 22 pounds) static
vertical load over a period of 5 seconds
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and a 22 N (approximately 4.9 pounds)
horizontal force, without tipping. Staff
advises that this test evaluates the same
stability hazard and is substantially
equivalent to the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinets standard, differing slightly
due to conversions to metric.
v. SOR/2016–152 Summary
The Canadian standard has a side
height and stability requirement similar
to the ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet
standard. While the Canadian standard
has a more stringent sleep surface angle
requirement, the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinet standard has a more extensive
latching requirement. Staff concludes
that the requirements in the ASTM
standard are adequate to address the
risk of injury demonstrated in the
incident data.
B. Flat Sleep Products 35
CPSC received public comments on
the 2019 SNPR regarding the safety of
currently unregulated flat infant sleep
products available in the marketplace.
In response, for the final rule CPSC staff
completed a review of CPSC’s
epidemiological databases, CPSRMS
and NEISS. CPSC received a total of 183
incident reports from January 1, 2019
through December 30, 2020, related to
flat sleep products available in the
marketplace that are currently not under
the purview of any mandatory or
voluntary standard that addresses sleep
hazards. These flat sleep products
include: In-bed sleepers, baskets (that
can function as hand-held carriers as
well), baby boxes, compact bassinets,
most of which are portable for travel,
and travel tents. All of these
unregulated sleep products are flat
(sleep surface has no incline) and most
come with mattress pads (with the
exception of some baby travel tents).
Based on the following analysis, the
Commission determines that the
performance and labeling requirements
of the voluntary standard for bassinets
and cradles, ASTM F2194–16e1, as
codified in 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, are
adequate to address the risk of injury
associated with flat infant sleep
products, and furthermore, finds that
requiring flat products to conform to
these requirements would also further
reduce the risk of injury associated with
flat sleep products.
1. Hazard Pattern Categories
Of the 183 reported incidents, 11 are
fatalities; among the remaining 172
35 Tab C of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package
contains CPSC staff’s assessment of the adequacy of
ASTM F2194–16e1 to address incidents associated
with flat sleep products.
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nonfatal incidents, 16 reported an
injury. Seven of the 11 fatalities
involved suffocation. We identified six
hazards related to the risk of injury or
death (we did not consider patterns that
did not relate to injuries or deaths, such
as consumer comments). The hazard
patterns identified among the 183
incidents are: Lock/latch problems,
falls/containment issues, instability,
asphyxiation/suffocation, productrelated issues, and undetermined
causes.
Engineering staff analyzed whether
the voluntary standard for bassinets,
ASTM F2194–16e1, would address the
identified hazards for flat sleep
products. The voluntary standard for
bassinets, ASTM F2194–16e1, is more
applicable to these flat products than
ASTM F3118–17a, because these
products have a sleep surface less than
10 degrees, and because, as set forth
below, the standard addresses the
identified hazards associated with these
products. The current voluntary
standard for infant inclined sleep
products, ASTM F3118–17a, is not
applicable to these flat sleep surface
products, and it does not address
hazards associated with flat sleep
surfaces.
In the 2019 SNPR, the Commission
proposed expanding the scope of ASTM
F3118–17a for the mandatory rule, to
include all infant sleep products
(inclined and flat) that are not covered
by another CPSC sleep standard,
including the bassinets, cribs (full-size
and non-full size), play yards, or
bedside sleepers standards. The 2019
SNPR proposed to require that all
products marketed or intended for
infant sleep have a seatback angle of 10
degrees or less, and meet 16 CFR part
1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, which includes the
performance requirements of ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinets. The following are
the identified hazards for flat sleep
products are discussed below.
(a) Hazard: Lock/Latch Issue
One hundred fifteen of the 183
incidents, and no deaths, were related to
latches that control the opening/closing
of the cover on the product failed.
Although these latch incidents did not
relate to a product folding or collapsing,
they illustrate, nevertheless, that these
products have latch failures. From
analyses on other products, staff is
aware that failure of a product’s latch
can cause the product to fold or collapse
unintentionally and pose a suffocation
hazard to the infant. The ASTM F2194–
16e1 bassinets standard addresses
hazards posed by a lock/latch failure
with an unintentional folding
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requirement. The requirement specifies
that if a folding product does not have
a latching or locking device, then it
shall not fold when a 20-lb. force is
applied in the direction most likely to
fold the product (with simulated infant
occupant). The requirement also
specifies if a folding product does have
a single-action latch, then it shall not
fold when a 10-lb. force is applied in the
direction most likely to fold the
product. Staff assesses that this
requirement adequately simulates the
action of unintentionally folding the
product, and therefore, to address this
risk of injury, we conclude that all flat
sleep products with a lock or latch
should at least meet the ASTM F2194–
16e1 bassinets standard’s unintentional
folding requirement.
The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets
standard also includes a ‘‘Removable
Bassinet Bed Attachment to Base/
Stand’’ performance requirement. A
removable bassinet bed attaches to the
bassinet stand and is secured with a
latch/lock. This requirement states a
removable bassinet bed shall:
• Not be supported by the bassinet
stand in an unlocked/latched
configuration;
• automatically lock to the bassinet
stand and can’t be placed in an
unlocked position on the bassinet
stand;
• clearly and obviously be unstable
when the product is unlocked/latched
by placing the sleeping surface at a
20-degree incline;
• have a false latch/lock visual
indicator designed to visually alert
caregivers when the bed is not
properly locked to the stand; or
• have a lock/latch mechanism that is
not needed to pass the stability
requirement.
The purpose of this requirement is to
ensure that bassinets that can be
removed from their stand are securely
latched to the stand when in use. Staff
assesses that the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinets standard’s requirement
adequately simulates the action of a
bassinet unintentionally unlatching
from its stand. Staff also assesses that
the ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets
standard’s requirement is more stringent
compared to the ASTM F3118–17a
infant inclined sleep products standard,
which lacks a requirement for products
that can be removed from a stand.
Therefore, the final rule requires that
flat sleep products meet the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinets standard’s
‘‘unintentional folding requirement’’
and the ‘‘Removable Bassinet Bed
Attachment to Base/Stand
requirement,’’ if applicable, to address
the risk of injury associated with locks
and latching features on these products.
(b) Hazard: Falls/Containment Issue
Twelve of the 183 incidents were
related to falls or an infant otherwise
not being kept contained within the
product. Of the 12 incidents, one
resulted in a death, one required
hospital admission, and nine required
ED visits. Failure to contain occupants
in an infant sleep product can lead to
infants falling or climbing out of the
infant sleep product into a hazardous
area.
Typically, regulated sleep products do
not allow an active occupant restraint
system for occupant containment.
Active restraint systems are only
effective when the caregiver actively
uses them and adjusts them correctly;
however, in a sleep environment, active
restraints can create an entanglement
and asphyxiation hazard.
The ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets
standard does not allow the use of
restraints, and instead addresses
containment-related hazards posed with
a side height requirement, a passive
safety feature. The requirement specifies
that the product’s interior side height
with an uncompressed mattress shall be
at least 7.5 inches.
In 2012, the ASTM F2194–12
bassinets standard first required a
minimum 7.5-inch side height based on
the Canadian standard.36 The side
height is measured from the upper
surface of the uncompressed mattress to
the upper surface of the lowest side.
This requirement remains in effect in
the most recent version of the bassinets
standard, ASTM F2194–16e1. Canada
requires a side height of 230 mm (9
inches), measured from the mattress
support. Because ASTM F2194–16e1
allows a bassinet mattress of 1.5 inches,
measuring from the upper surface of the
mattress support, which is underneath
the mattress, to the upper surface of the
side would be 1.5 inches greater than
measuring from the upper surface of an
uncompressed mattress. Therefore, staff
assesses that the 7.5-inch side height,
from the upper surface of an
uncompressed mattress is functionally
equivalent to the 9-inch side height,
measured from the upper surface of the
mattress support in Canada.
Products that CPSC staff identified as
flat sleep products are not currently
subject to a voluntary or mandatory
standard that specifies a minimum side
height. Flat sleep products that are
considered hand-held carriers under 16
CFR part 1225, Safety Standard for
Hand-Held Infant Carriers, and ASTM
F2050–19, Standard Consumer Safety
SpeciÉcation for Hand-Held Infant
Carriers, can be defined as a ‘‘hand-held
bassinet/cradle’’ product intended for
sleep, but ‘‘hand-held bassinet/cradles’’
are not subject to a side height
requirement in the mandatory or
voluntary standard. Products without a
minimum side height could fail to
contain occupants, which can lead to
infants falling or climbing out of the
product into a hazardous area.
Table 4 shows the side height
requirements for each sleep product
standard. Sleep products that have a
minimum side height requirement range
from 2-inches for the voluntary standard
for infant inclined sleep products, to 9inches for cribs. Bassinets, bedside
sleepers, and infant inclined sleep
products are intended for infants from
birth to 5-months old. Cribs are
intended for newborns up to children
35-inches tall, which is equivalent to a
95th percentile in stature 21-month-old.
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TABLE 4—SIDE HEIGHT REQUIREMENTS FOR SLEEP PRODUCTS
Standard
Side height requirement
16 CFR 1218—Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles ..................
ASTM F2194–16e1, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Bassinets and Cradles.
16 CFR 1219—Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs ......................
ASTM F1169–19, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for FullSize Baby Cribs.
7.5 inches ......................................
0–5 months, or sit up.
9 inches .........................................
0–35 inches tall (95th percentile
21-month old).
36 78
Age range
FR 63,109 (Oct. 23, 2013).
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TABLE 4—SIDE HEIGHT REQUIREMENTS FOR SLEEP PRODUCTS—Continued
Standard
Side height requirement
Age range
16 CFR 1220—Safety Standards for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs ............
16 CFR 1221—Safety Standards for Play Yards.
ASTM F 406–19, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for NonFull-Size Baby Cribs/Play Yards.
16 CFR 1222—Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers ..........................
ASTM F2906–13, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Bedside Sleepers.
ASTM F3118–17a, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Infant
Inclined Sleep Products.
16 CFR part 1225 Safety Standard for Hand-Held Infant Carrier ..........
ASTM F2050–19 Standard Consumer Safety Specification for HandHeld Infant Carrier.
9 inches .........................................
0–35 inches tall (95th percentile
21-month old).
4 inches on side next to adult bed.
7.5 inches for other 3 sides.
0–5 months, or sit up.
3 inches .........................................
2 inches .........................................
No requirements.
0–5 months, or sit up.
0–3 months.
Inclined sleep products covered in
ASTM F3118–17a can meet the standard
with a minimum side height of 3-inches,
for products intended for newborns, to
5-month of age and a minimum side
height of 2-inches, for products
intended for newborns up to 3-months
old.
Upon review of applicable standards,
CPSC staff determined that the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinets standard’s 7.5inch side height requirement provided
the greatest safety for the intended use
for newborns to 5-months of age. Staff
assesses that the minimum side height
requirement of 2-inches and 3-inches in
ASTM F3118–17a is inadequate to
address the incidents of infants failing
to be contained in low-sided products,
and the 3-inch side height is lower than
the center of gravity of a 5-month-old
infant on its side. Staff determined that
because most flat sleep products are
intended for infants under 5 months,
who cannot sit upright unassisted, the
side height requirement in ASTM
F2194–16e1 is adequate to address
containment incidents. Based on staff’s
analysis, the Commission determines
that flat sleep products with no side
height requirements pose a potential fall
hazard, as reflected in the incident data.
Staff’s analysis demonstrates that the
ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets standard’s
7.5-inch side height requirement is
appropriate and would adequately
address the falls/containment hazard in
flat sleep products for infants up to 5
months old or who cannot sit up
unassisted. Therefore, consistent with
the 2019 SNPR, the final rule requires
that all infant sleep products, inclined
and flat, meet the side height
requirement of the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinets standard, as provided in 16
CFR part 1218, to address fall/
containment hazards.
(c) Hazard: Instability
Twelve of the 183 incidents were
related to the instability of the product.
An unstable product can lead to tip-over
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incidents. Of the 12 incidents, two
resulted in injuries, one involved an ED
visit. The data summarized in Tab B of
the Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package
includes at least one incident in a small,
portable infant sleep product involving
a sibling interaction resulting in a fall.
Specifically, the NEISS report states:
‘‘7WKOF WITH HEAD INJURY, FELL
FROM PORTABLE BASSINET THAT
WAS ON COUCH, APPROX 1.5FT,
YOUNGER BROTHER PULLED THE
BASSINET AND IT FLIPPED ONTO
THE PLAYMAT, PT LANDED ON RT
SIDE OF HEAD.’’ This sibling
interaction-type incident is addressed
by the bassinet standard, as discussed
below.
Unregulated flat sleep products are
not required to have a stand. Therefore,
these products can be placed directly on
the floor or on potentially hazardous or
unstable elevated surfaces, such as
tables, countertops, soft mattresses, or
couches. The ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinets standard addresses this hazard
scenario by requiring bassinets to have
a stand/base/frame. ASTM F2194–16e1
defines a ‘‘bassinet’’ as a small bed
‘‘supported by free standing legs, a
stationary frame/stand, a wheeled base,
a rocking base, or which can swing
relative to a stationary base.’’ This
requirement to have a stand, and be
raised off the floor, increases the
stability of a portable product by
discouraging or preventing use of the
product on other, less stable, surfaces,
such as elevated surfaces or soft surfaces
(couches and adult beds). Therefore,
with respect to this hazard scenario, and
as proposed in the 2019 SNPR, the final
rule requires that all infant sleep
products, flat and inclined, meet the
ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets standard’s
requirements, including requiring
products to have a stand, to further
reduce the risk of injury from a product
placed on a hazardous elevated surface
or an unstable surface, such as a couch
or adult bed. This requirement in the
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final rule is codified by requiring
products to meet the definitional
requirement of a ‘‘bassinet/cradle.’’
Additionally, the ASTM F2194–16e1
bassinets standard addresses hazards
posed by the product’s instability with
a stability requirement. The requirement
specifies that the product (with
simulated newborn occupant) withstand
a 23-lb. vertical force and 5-lb.
horizontal force along its side, without
tipping. The rationale in ASTM F2194
states the dual application of forces
simulates a 2-year-old male pulling on
the side of the product; staff assesses
that this is a reasonable scenario in
which the product may tip over.
Incident data also demonstrate that
these compact products are used on
elevated surfaces, such as beds and
couches, from which the infant and
product fell. Therefore, with respect to
the product’s stability, the final rule
requires that all infant sleep products
meet the stability requirement of the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194–16e1, as provided in 16 CFR part
1218, to further reduce the risk of injury
associated with product tip-over.
The Canadian requirement in
Schedule 11, Test for Stability of
Cradles, Bassinets and Stands, of their
regulation is substantially equivalent to
the requirement in ASTM F2194–16e1.
The requirement specifies that the
product (with a simulated newborn
occupant) withstand a 10-kg
(approximately 22 pounds) static
vertical load over a period of 5 seconds
and a 22 newton (approximately 4.9
pounds) horizontal force without
tipping. Staff advises that this test is
substantially equivalent to the ASTM
test, differing slightly due to
conversions to metric.
(d) Hazard: Asphyxiation/Suffocation
Nine of the 183 incidents were related
to infants that partially or fully rolled
over from their initial position in infant
sleep products. Of the nine incidents,
eight resulted in a death, and one
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resulted in a near-suffocation prevented
by a nearby parent.
The voluntary standard for bassinets,
ASTM F2194–16e1, addresses the
asphyxiation/suffocation hazard with
the following general/performance
requirements:
• 5.10 Corner Posts: This
requirement addresses corner post
extensions that can entangle ribbons,
pacifier cords, necklaces, or occupant
clothing. Entanglement of any of these
items could lead to the asphyxiation of
the occupant. This requirement limits
the extension of a bassinet’s corner post
from extending more than .06 inches
above the upper edge of an end or side
panel. Corner posts that extend at least
16 inches above the top of a side rail are
exempt because they are deemed
inaccessible to the occupant. These are
the same requirements found in the
regulated ASTM F406–19 (non-fullsized cribs) and ASTM F1169–19 (fullsized cribs) standards that CPSC staff
previously concluded adequately
address the corner post entanglement
hazard.
• 6.1 Spacing of Rigid-Sided
Bassinet/Cradle Components. This
requirement limits the distance between
slats to less than 23⁄8 inches to mitigate
the suffocation hazard from feet-first
head entrapment.
• 6.2 Openings for Mesh/FabricSided Bassinets/Cradle. This
requirement tests openings in the
bassinet’s mesh for entrapment of
fingers, toes, and snaring buttons, often
used on infant clothing. The snaring of
a button entraps the button and could
lead to asphyxiation as the infant
becomes entangled and entrapped. In
this performance requirement, the
mesh-sided bassinet’s openings cannot
allow a 1⁄4-inch rod to fit through.
• 6.5.3 Pad Dimensions. This
requirement mitigates the hazard of
suffocating when entrapped in the space
between the edge of the mattress and the
bassinet’s sidewall, by limiting the
available space to less than 1 inch.
• 6.7 Bassinets with Segmented
Mattress: Flatness Test. This
requirement limits sleep surface
variability of a segmented or folding
mattress to 10 degrees or less. This angle
was determined to reduce the likelihood
of an infant’s face becoming engulfed by
a small ‘‘V’’ shape formed by the creases
in a folded mattress, potentially present
in a bassinet that uses a folding play
yard mattress as the bassinet mattress.
• 6.8 Fabric-Sided Enclosed
Openings. This requirement addresses
the hazard of a feet-first head
entrapment through the openings of
fabric-sided bassinets. This requirement
limits the openings in a fabric-sided
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bassinet to prevent the 5th percentile 0
to 2-year-old torso probe from passing
through. This requirement prevents a
child’s torso from fitting through any
openings in the fabric sidewalls;
therefore, staff concludes this
requirement would prevent a feet-first
head entrapment.
• 6.9 Rock/Swing Angle. This
requirement limits the bassinet’s
sleeping surface angle to less than 20
degrees when rocked, and seven degrees
when the bassinet is at rest. In the 2019
SNPR, and in this final rule, the
Commission determined that a flat sleep
surface that does not exceed 10 degrees
offers infants the safest sleep
environment. This conclusion is based
on the Mannen Study.
In total, these requirements address
known suffocation hazards with infant
sleep and create a minimally safe sleep
environment. Therefore, for the final
rule, with respect to the asphyxiation/
suffocation hazard, we finalize the 2019
SNPR proposal, by requiring that all
infant sleep products meet general and
performance requirements of the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194–16e1, as provided in 16 CFR part
1218, to further reduce the risk of death
from suffocation.
(e) Hazard: Product-Related Issues
Three of the 183 incidents were
related to mold or quality of the product
material. Two of the three products
were in-bed sleepers, while the third
was a compact bassinet/travel bed. All
three reported an injury. None of the
voluntary standards currently address
conditions such as mold that manifest
due to the conditions under which a
product is used. A moisture-resistant
requirement has been discussed in the
ASTM task group for baby boxes (which
is under the bassinet subcommittee), but
the task group has not reached a
consensus on appropriate performance
requirements to address mold and
moisture resistance. CPSC staff will
continue to work with this task group.
(f) Hazard: Undetermined Issues
Three of the 183 incidents did not
have enough reported information for us
to determine the issue involved. Two of
the incidents were fatalities; in both
cases, CPSC Field investigation reports
indicate that the cause of death is
undetermined. The third incident
resulted in a hospitalization due to
unspecified breathing difficulties
suffered by the infant. The reports did
not provide sufficient information on
the circumstances of deaths, and injury
reports involved unspecified falls.
Without information on the
circumstances of deaths or injuries, we
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are unable to assess whether the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194–16e1, would adequately address
the hazards in this category.
2. Assessment of International
Standards
(a) EN12790:2009 Reclined Cradles
The scope of the European Standard,
EN 12790–2009 ‘‘Child use and care
articles—Reclined cradles’’ includes
inclined bassinets/cradles, car seat
carriers, hammocks, and bouncers.
Some of the general requirements could
apply, but because the scope of the
products that fall within this standard is
not the same as the final rule, most of
the requirements are not applicable to
infant sleep products.
i. Side Height
The EN 12790:2009 standard does not
have a side height requirement, but it
includes a three-point restraint to
address the containment hazard. The
ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinet standard is
more stringent by requiring a minimum
side height of 7.5 inches. Restraints are
an active safety feature that might not
always be used, while the side height
requirement is a passive safety feature.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The EN 12790:2009 standard requires
a seatback angle between 10 degrees and
80 degrees, while the ASTM F2194–
16e1 bassinet standard is more stringent
by requiring a maximum sleep surface
angle of 10 degrees. The EN 12790:2009
standard was written for products that
may or may not be intended for sleep,
such as car seats, a scope that is broader
than the scope of the ASTM bassinet
standard. The Mannen Study concluded
that a seatback angle of 10 degrees or
less is safe. Accordingly, the sleep
surface requirement in the final rule
remains consistent with the Mannen
Study findings, and as already codified
in 16 CFR part 1218.
iii. Latching Requirements
The EN 12790:2009 standard specifies
that infant rocking cradles must have at
least one automatic locking latch
mechanism, and that the locking
mechanisms:
• Require 50N (11.24 pounds-force) to
unlatch after operating the latch 300
times;
• Require a tool to unlatch;
• Require two consecutive actions to
unlatch; or
• Require two independent and
simultaneous actions to unlatch.
The EN 12790:2009 standard’s
latching requirement simulates the
action of unintentionally folding the
product. The ASTM F2194–16e1
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bassinets standard similarly includes
requirements that address the
unintentional folding hazard and
requirements that address the false
latching of a removable bassinet bed.
Therefore, staff assesses that the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinets standard’s
latching requirements are adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The EN 12790:2009 standard requires
products with a test mass not to tip over
when placed on a 15-degree surface.
The test mass for cradles designed for
occupants up to 13.22 pounds is 19.84
pounds. The test mass for cradles
designed for occupants up to 19.87
pounds is 33.06 pounds. This standard
simulates the stability of an occupied
reclined cradle on an uneven surface.
This is different compared to the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinets standard, which
requires the product (with simulated
newborn occupant) to withstand a 23-lb.
vertical force and 5-lb. horizontal force
along its side, without tipping. The
rationale in ASTM F2194 states the dual
application of forces simulates a 2-yearold male pulling on the side of the
product; staff concludes that this is a
reasonable scenario in which the
product may tip over.
v. EN 12790:2009 Summary
The EN 12790:2009 reclined cradle
standard is less stringent than the
ASTM F2194–16e1 bassinets standard
by not requiring any minimum side
height for containment and permits a
more inclined sleep surface angle for
products that include reclined cradles
and car seats for children up to 19.84
pounds.
C. Applicability of ASTM F2194–16e1 to
Flat Sleep Product Hazards
Table 5 summarizes the hazards
associated with flat sleep products and
how each hazard category is addressed
by the voluntary standard for bassinets,
ASTM F2194–16e1. Table 5
demonstrates that four hazard categories
(shaded) are addressed by ASTM
F2194–16e1: Latching, Falls/
Containment, Instability, and
Asphyxiation/Suffocation.
TABLE 5—FLAT SLEEP PRODUCT HAZARDS ADDRESSED BY BASSINETS VOLUNTARY STANDARD
Infant sleep hazards
Applicable
voluntary
standard
Product
Latching
Asphyxiation/
suffocation
Instability
Miscellaneous
product-related
Flat Sleep Products
(flat and inclined).
...........................
115 incidents:
Not currently
addressed.
12 incidents: 1
death. Not currently addressed.
12 incidents: 2
injuries. Not
currently addressed.
9 incidents: 8 deaths; not
currently addressed.
3 mold-related
incidents; not
currently addressed.
Bassinet/Cradle .....
ASTM F2194–
16e1.
Unintentional
folding requirement.
Side height requirement.
Stability requirement.
Max sleep surface angle
defined in definition;
Restraints not allowed;
Flatness/hazardous Vs
identified; Pad dimensions; Corner posts;
fabric sided enclosed
openings; Spacing;
Mesh openings.
Not currently addressed; task
group work.
Based on this assessment of the
hazards associated with flat sleep
products, and consistent with the 2019
SNPR, the final rule requires that all
infant sleep products not already
regulated by a CPSC sleep standard
meet the requirements in the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinets standard, as
provided in 16 CFR part 1218, to
address the risk of injury associated
with these sleep products. Specifically,
the final rule requires that infant sleep
products, meaning products that are
marketed or intended as a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not subject
to a CPSC sleep standard (bassinets and
cradles, cribs (full-size and non-fullsize), play yards, or bedside sleepers),
meet the requirements of 16 CFR part
1218, including conforming to the
definition of a ‘‘bassinet/cradle.’’
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Falls/
containment
VII. Response to Comments
The Commission collected comments
on the 2017 NPR, which proposed to
incorporate by reference the thencurrent voluntary standard for infant
inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118–
17, with a modification to the standard’s
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definition of ‘‘accessory.’’ 82 FR 16964
(April 7, 2017). The Commission also
collected comments on the 2019 SNPR,
which proposed to incorporate by
reference the current voluntary standard
for infant inclined sleep products
(ASTM F3118–17a), with modifications
to make the standard more stringent, to
further reduce the risk of injury. 84 FR
60949 (Nov. 12, 2019). The 2019 SNPR
proposed to expand the scope of the
rule to include all unregulated infant
sleep products, including inclined
products and non-inclined, flat
products. The 2019 SNPR invited the
public to submit written comments
during a 75-day comment period,
beginning on the SNPR publication
date, and ending on January 27, 2020. In
response to a request for an extension of
the comment period, the Commission
extended the comment period by 30
days, closing on February 26, 2020. 85
FR 4918 (Jan. 28, 2020).
Below we consolidate the
Commission’s responses to comments
on the 2017 NPR and the 2019 SNPR.
In response to the 2017 NPR, the
Commission received seven comments.
In response to the 2019 SNPR, the
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Undetermined
3 incidents: Two
deaths. Too little information
to determine
addressability.
Too little information to determine
addressability.
Commission received 56 comments
within the comment period. We also
considered two late-filed documents,
one received on February 2, 2021, and
one received on April 30, 2021. We
organized the comments by rulemaking
notice (2017 NPR or 2019 SNPR), and
then by topic.
Numerous commenters on the 2019
SNPR, such as the American Academy
of Pediatrics (AAP), consumer groups,
and individual parents, supported the
SNPR, because the products covered in
the final rule will be required to follow
the AAP safe sleep guidelines. Based on
consideration of the comments received,
for the final rule, the Commission will
maintain the proposed 12-month
effective date, and make several
clarifications, as listed in section I.F of
this preamble.
A. Comments on the 2017 NPR
1. Safety of Inclined Products
Comment 1: Three commenters
disagreed with the 2017 NPR, stating
that infant sleep products with a 30degree seat back angle are not safe and
contradict the AAP’s safe sleep
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recommendations. One commenter also
indicated that the Commission should:
• Conduct more research on the 30degree seat back angle;
• Conduct more research on
developmental implications when an
infant is restrained while sleeping;
• Provide performance requirements
to address product misassembly;
• Make the side height requirement
match the 7.5 side height requirement in
the bassinets and cradles standard;
• Develop performance or design
changes for compact units so they
cannot be placed on a raised surface, in
crib, or on soft surface;
• Add seat back height requirement
for infant products like newborn
products;
• Add requirements for hammocks to
increase stability;
• Add requirements for flat sleep
products, so an infant cannot move into
an unsafe chin to chest position;
• Add pictograms to warnings like
slings and hand-held carriers;
• Include ‘‘marking’’ on products to
show compliance with new regulations;
• Conduct market surveillance after a
regulation becomes effective; and
• Have a 6-month effective date for
the final rule.
Response 1: We agree, based on the
Mannen Study, that infant sleep
products, as defined in the final rule,
should not have a seat back/sleep
surface angle greater than 10 degrees.
The Commission proposed to address
many of the commenter’s in-scope
recommendations noted above in the
2019 SNPR, and is now finalizing the
requirements, by requiring inclined and
flat sleep products that are marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months old, to meet the bassinet
standard. Due to the expected
significant economic impact on some
manufacturers, the Commission will
maintain the proposed 12-month
effective date for the final rule.
2. Definition of ‘‘Infant Inclined Sleep
Product’’
Comment 2: A commenter stated that
the phrase, ‘‘primarily intended and
marketed to provide sleeping
accommodations,’’ in the proposed
definition of an ‘‘infant inclined sleep
product,’’ is not needed, because
‘‘incorporating a manufacturer’s
marketing intentions into a definition of
a product which impacts the safety
standard of that product opens the door
to potential conflicts of interests.’’ The
commenter reasoned that a child’s age
and the product incline are objective
factors, while a manufacturer’s intent is
more subjective, and could allow
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manufacturers to market the product in
a way to avoid meeting the requirements
of the rule.
Response 2: Although the definition
the commenter refers to in the standard
no longer includes the term ‘‘inclined,’’
we respond here to the concept of
including the phrase ‘‘marketed or
intended’’ in the definition of ‘‘infant
sleep product’’ in the final rule. A
manufacturer’s intended use of the
product and marketing guide informs
caregivers about the product’s safe use.
Manufacturers of products that are not
designed or marketed for use as an
infant sleep product should provide
caregivers with instructions and
warnings regarding safe use of the
product. Including a manufacturer’s
marketing and intent in the definition
also assists the Commission to enforce
the regulation, because it provides
objective criteria for CPSC staff to apply
to a product’s name, packaging,
warnings, labeling, and marketing
materials about whether the product
falls within the scope of the rule. CPSC
staff has experience using marketing
materials to enforce CPSC’s regulations,
and CPSC is required to use such
materials in some cases. For example,
section 3 of the CPSA provides factors
for determining whether a product is a
‘‘children’s product,’’ and includes
several factors that require reviewing
labeling, promotion, and advertising, to
determine whether a product is
‘‘designed or intended primarily for
children 12 years of age or younger.’’ 15
U.S.C. 2052(a)(2). Products that have no
use other than infant sleep, based on the
product’s design, cannot be labelled as
not intended for infant sleep to avoid
meeting the requirements of the final
rule.
3. Comments Superseded by the 2019
SNPR
Comment 3: Two commenters agreed
with the modification of the ‘‘accessory’’
definition in the 2017 NPR, and with
the 12-month effective date. One
commenter had a specific comment
related to restraint requirements in the
NPR.
Response 3: The 2019 SNPR
supersedes the 2017 NPR. The proposed
modification to the definition of
‘‘accessory’’ is no longer at issue in the
final rule, because this definition has
been removed, along with other
requirements related to inclined sleep
products. The Commission will
maintain the 12-month effective date for
the final rule, to provide manufacturers
and importers sufficient time to come
into compliance. Allowance of a
restraint requirement in an infant sleep
product was unique to inclined sleep
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products to contain the infant in the
product. Consistent with the 2019
SNPR, the Commission removed the
restraint requirement in the final rule,
because restraints can create a
strangulation hazard. The passive
containment provision in the bassinet
and cradle standard, which requires a
product side height of 7.5 inches and a
flat (below 10 degree) sleep surface,
follows safe sleep practices for
containment: A bare, flat, infant sleep
surface.
B. Comments on the 2019 SNPR
1. Scope of the Final Rule
(a) All Products Marketed, Promoted, or
Otherwise Indicated for Sleep
Comment 4: A commenter suggested:
‘‘[t]he new standard should apply not
just to those infant products intended by
the manufacturer for sleep or certified as
being for sleep, but also any product
that is marketed, promoted, or otherwise
indicated—or may be reasonably
interpreted as indicating—as being for
any kind of sleep, including products
described using substitute language for
sleep, such as ‘nap’ or ‘snooze.’ ’’
Several other commenters expressed
concern that various terms used in the
2019 SNPR were vague, and
recommended that more precise
definitions be provided for ‘‘sleep’’ and
‘‘sleeping accommodations.’’ In
addition, commenters requested
clarification regarding which products
are included in the definitions.
Response 4: In response to this
comment, the preamble and regulation
text for the final rule: (1) Clarify that the
scope of the rule includes products with
inclined and flat sleep surfaces, and (2)
more precisely explain the definition of
an ‘‘infant sleep product.’’ For example,
to clarify that the scope of the rule
includes inclined and flat sleep
products, the scope of CPSC’s regulation
text in § 1236.2, and the scope of the
revised voluntary standard in section
1.3, explain that the scope of the infant
sleep products rule includes products
with inclined and flat sleep surfaces.
The final rule also broadens the
definition of an ‘‘infant sleep product’’
to include the term ‘‘marketed’’: Which
is ‘‘a product marketed or intended to
provide sleeping accommodations for an
infant up to 5 months old that is not
subject to any of the following . . . .’’
The definition then lists CPSC’s five
infant sleep standards, to ensure that all
infant products marketed or intended
for infant sleep meet the requirements of
a CPSC sleep standard, so that all
products meet minimum safe sleep
requirements. Staff modified the
introduction, scope, and definitions in
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the final rule to clarify the applicability
of the rule to any infant sleep product
not covered by another CPSC sleep
standard.
While newborns can and do fall
asleep in many products, because young
infants sleep for extended hours
throughout the day, certain products are
designed, marketed, and intended for
infant sleep. Therefore, ‘‘sleep’’ and
‘‘sleeping accommodations’’ refer to
products that are marketed or intended
for both extended, unattended sleep,
and also napping, snoozing, and other
types of sleep in which a parent may or
may not be present, awake, and
attentive. Additionally, if a product
name implies the product is for use as
an infant sleep product, such as use of
the terms ‘‘bed,’’ ‘‘bassinet,’’ or ‘‘crib,’’
but does not already comply with the
bassinet or crib regulation, the product
falls within the scope of the final rule.
If a product, through marketing,
pictures, and written description,
indicates that the product is being sold
as an infant sleep product for infants up
to 5 months old, that product will be
covered by this regulation if it is not
already subject to a CPSC sleep
standard.
The 2019 SNPR included four
definitions, ‘‘infant sleep products,’’
‘‘newborn sleep products,’’ ‘‘compact
sleep products,’’ and ‘‘accessory sleep
products.’’ However, this distinction is
not necessary and creates confusion
when identifying infant sleep products,
because there are no unique
requirements in this rule based on these
definitions. Accordingly, for the final
rule, to clarify which infant sleep
products are subject to the rule, the
Commission removed the separate
definitions of ‘‘newborn,’’ ‘‘compact,’’
and ‘‘accessory’’ sleep products, and
will rely solely on the definition of an
‘‘infant sleep product’’:
3.1.7 infant sleep product, n—a
product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
is not subject to any of the following:
• 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles
• 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standard
for Play Yards
• 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers
(b) Distinguishing Non-Sleep Products
Comment 5: A commenter stated that
infant car seats, swings, and rockers
typically have seatback angles greater
than 30 degrees, adding that these
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products have use patterns very similar
to products that fall within the scope of
ASTM F3118. The commenter requested
clarification of the distinguishing
features or characteristics that
differentiate these two types of products
with very similar usage patterns.
Response 5: The purpose of the final
rule is to regulate all products marketed
or intended for infant sleep for infants
up to 5 months old. Accordingly, the
products within the scope of the final
rule are all marketed and intended for
sleep, and do not include car seats,
swings, or rockers, unless a product is
marketed or intended for sleep.
Newborns can and do fall asleep in
many products, because young infants
typically sleep 16 to 17 hours a day, 1
to 2 hours at a time. By 3 months,
infants can sleep 4 to 5 hours during the
day and 9 to 10 hours during the
night.37 However, products such as car
seats, swings, and rockers typically are
not marketed for use as an infant sleep
product; these products are intended for
use while the child is awake. Moreover,
regarding car seats, CPSC has
jurisdiction only for use outside of an
automobile, when the product is being
used as an infant carrier; while the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) has
jurisdiction over car seats being used in
an automobile, including the car seats’
angle and design for safe use in an
automobile.
Comment 6: Several commenters
stated that the scope of the 2019 SNPR
was too broad, and expressed concerns
that non-sleep products would be
included. Some of the comments
requested specific exclusions or
inclusions to the scope of the final rule.
Response 6: The final rule does not
apply to products that are not marketed
or intended for infant sleep, such as
bouncer seats, swings, infant chairs, or
other similar durable infant or toddler
products that are marketed for use while
a child is awake. In addition, the
Commission is specifically excluding
crib mattresses that fall within the scope
of the voluntary standard for crib
mattresses, ASTM F2933, from the
scope of the final rule. A crib mattress,
alone, does not meet the definition of an
‘‘infant sleep product,’’ and is always
used in conjunction with a sleep
product, such as a crib or play yard,
which are within one of the five existing
CPSC sleep standards. The Commission
issued a notice of proposed rulemaking
for crib mattresses in 2020, and we
intend to finalize a separate rule on crib
mattresses this fiscal year.
37 https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/topic/
default?id=infant-sleep-90-P02237.
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The purpose of the rule is to set
minimum safe sleep requirements for
products that are marketed or intended
for infant sleep up to 5 months old. The
Commission is aware that infant sleep
products share hazard patterns that can
be addressed by performance and
labeling requirements; but currently, a
gap exists between regulated and
unregulated products. Therefore, the
scope of the final rule includes all infant
sleep products not already covered by a
mandatory CPSC sleep standard
(bassinets, full-sized cribs, non-fullsized cribs, play yards, or bedside
sleepers), and requires the product to be
tested to the bassinet standard as a
default, so that all infant sleep products
follow a mandatory safety standard for
infant sleep, specifically (and
minimally) the standard for bassinets
and cradles. Based on staff’s evaluation,
following the requirements of the
bassinet and cradle standard would
address the hazard patterns found in the
incident data for unregulated inclined
and flat sleep products (see section VI
of this preamble and Tab B and C of
Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package).
The Commission is also concerned
about new infant sleep products that
come on the market and that do not
follow any CPSC sleep standard. The
concern is that caregivers may view
these products as safe because they are
on the market, even though these
products may not address known infant
sleep hazards or may not be tested to an
appropriate standard. Accordingly, the
final rule requires all products marketed
or intended for sleep for infants up to
5 months old to follow core safe sleep
principles, which the Commission, in
agreement with AAP, states are: Place
infants alone, on their back, and on a
flat, firm surface with no restraints or
loose fabric nearby.
Rather than list specific inclusions
and exclusions, other than excluding
crib mattresses, the scope and
definitions in the final rule address
potential confusion about which infant
sleep products are covered. For
example, the definition of an ‘‘infant
sleep product’’ states:
3.1.7 infant sleep product, n—a
product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
is not subject to any of the following:
• 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles
• 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
• 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standard
for Play Yards
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• 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers
Comment 7: Several commenters
asked for clarification regarding whether
products, similar in design to inclined
sleepers but marketed as a ‘‘soother,’’
‘‘rocker,’’ or ‘‘lounger,’’ are in-scope for
the rule, and suggested that such
products should be in-scope due to the
potential for consumer confusion as to
intended uses. We also received a
comment asking that inclined products
for activity and transport, such as a
bouncers, strollers, and swings, be
excluded from the scope of the rule.
Response 7: Infant products, inclined
or flat, do not fall within the scope of
the final rule as long as they are not
intended for sleep, and they are
marketed conspicuously as not for sleep
by infants up to 5 months old. This
means that the product packaging,
marketing materials, inserts, and
instructions cannot indicate that the
product is for sleep, or imply through
pictures of sleeping infants that sleeping
in the product is acceptable. In addition,
if ‘‘attended’’ or ‘‘supervised’’ sleep is
indicated, then the product would be
considered within the scope of the final
rule. The product name, description,
and instructions also cannot include
references to sleep, snooze, dream, or
nap. CPSC staff would consider
decorations on the product that include
pictures of sleeping animals or sleeping
cartoon figures to imply the product is
intended for sleep. Additionally, the
product must not be described as a bed.
Some of these products, such as stroller
accessories, are already required by the
mandatory standard for that product
type to meet the bassinet standard when
the product is in bassinet mode.
Comment 8: One commenter
acknowledged that the scope of the rule
does not include sleep positioners and
requested ‘‘the CPSC to better enforce
the ban on sleep positioners.’’
Response 8: Neither CPSC, nor FDA,
has a ‘‘ban on sleep positioners’’;
however, both agencies advise
consumers not to use them with infants
due to the risk of suffocation. Sleep
positioners are considered accessories,
and not an ‘‘infant sleep product’’ under
the definition proposed in the 2019
SNPR or as clarified in the final rule.
Similar to crib mattresses, sleep
positioners are not intended to be used
as the sole product for sleep; instead,
they are used in conjunction with a
sleep product, for example, to hold an
infant in a position while inside a crib.
Therefore, sleep positioners do not fall
within the final rule because they are
not intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant. The
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Commission declines to explicitly
exclude sleep positioners from the final
rule at this time.
(c) Upper Age Limit for Infants Up to 5
Months Old
Comment 9: The 2019 SNPR posed a
question regarding whether the
Commission should remove the upper
age limit from the scope of the
mandatory standard, to accommodate a
broad scope of infant sleep products.
Several commenters stated that the final
rule should remain applicable to
products intended for infants up to 5
months old. Otherwise, the commenters
said new requirements addressing
containment, stability, and side height
would need to be added to the bassinet
standard for products intended for ages
6 to 12 months, noting that the existing
bassinet requirements are designed only
for infants up to 5 months old.
Response 9: After further
consideration, the Commission agrees
that changing the scope of the final rule
to remove the upper age limit, or to
include products intended for infants
up to 12 months old (as suggested at an
ASTM task group meeting), would
require new performance, labeling, and
testing requirements in the bassinet
standard. As the commenters noted, the
bassinet standard only applies to infants
up to 5 months of age. Therefore, a
number of requirements in the ASTM
F2194–16e1 bassinet standard, would
need to be changed to address older,
larger, and more mobile and active
infants, including changes to the scope
in section 1.3, the stability requirement
in section 6.4, and the side height
requirement in section 6.5.4.
Additionally, the final rule focuses on
hazards to young infants associated with
infant sleep products because infants
under 5 months old are the most
vulnerable, due to their limited mobility
and young, developing respiratory
system. Requiring currently unregulated
inclined and flat sleep products to meet
the bassinet standard sets minimum
requirements for safe sleep. Bassinets
are designed for children who are not
yet mobile, and the final rule addresses
the hazards seen in this population.
Older infants, i.e., 6 to 12 months old,
have different needs for sleep, and the
existing standards for this older age
group are designed to address those
needs. By 6 months of age, infants have
developed enough mobility that they
can perform such actions as rolling back
and forth and pulling themselves up.
The Commission agrees with CPSC
staff’s assessment that it is unsafe for 6
to 12 month olds to be in a confined
space, such as a bassinet, for sleeping,
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as they may roll out of the product, or
pull themselves out of the product.
The unregulated products on the
market with which CPSC has concerns,
e.g., in-bed sleepers, baby boxes, and
compact bassinets, are intended for this
younger, more vulnerable population. In
addition, CPSC data indicate that 34
percent of the incidents involving
inclined sleep products and 49 percent
of the incidents involving unregulated,
flat, sleep products happened to infants
0 to 5 months of age. Infants 6 to 12
months old were involved in 9 percent
of inclined sleep products and 4 percent
of unregulated, flat sleep product
incidents, respectively. Therefore,
consistent with the 2019 SNPR, the final
rule limits the scope of the standard to
infants up to 5 months of age. Due to the
size and design of these unregulated
compact/travel products, older infants
should not be placed to sleep in these
products, and older infants are not
included within the scope of the final
rule.
(d) Consumer Registration Rule
Comment 10: A commenter expressed
no objection to requiring product
registration cards for products within
the scope of the rule, but suggested that
the Commission ‘‘remain open to
innovation as to the specific methods of
achieving optimum product traceability,
particularly now that so many products
are linked to internet devices.’’
Response 10: In the 2009 NPR for the
consumer registration rule (74 FR 30986
(June 29, 2009)), the Commission said it:
‘‘intends to encourage innovation in the
use of the internet for product
registration,’’ and the methods of
registration online are encouraged,
whether through a website or email. The
Commission is open to innovation in
this area, but we note that section 104(e)
of the CPSIA sets forth a process the
Commission must follow to allow new
technology for product registration, in
lieu of the product registration card
requirements in part 1130.
Comment 11: A commenter supported
the Commission’s amendment of the
consumer registration rule, 16 CFR part
1130, to identify infant sleep products
as durable infant or toddler products
subject to the product registration
requirements, so that freestanding sleep
products without a frame, are included
within the scope of part 1130.
Staff Response 11: To avoid
confusion, and to ensure that all infant
sleep products fall within the
requirements of part 1130, the final rule
updates the list of durable infant or
toddler products in part 1130 to
explicitly identify ‘‘infant sleep
products’’ as durable infant or toddler
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2. Incident Data
(a) Inclusion of Flat Sleep Products
Comment 12: Multiple commenters
expressed concern about in-bed
sleepers, baby boxes, and compact
bassinets being subject to the standard.
Concerns included:
• In-bed sleepers, baby boxes, and
compact bassinets are not identified
in CPSC data;
• Bed-sharing is a common practice in
the United States and abroad;
• Potential disparity in safety among inbed sleepers versus a potential ban of
in-bed sleepers;
• Interest in increased advocacy
regarding bed-sharing; and
• Differences among products
necessitates different requirements
based on demonstrable hazard data.
Commenters objected to including noninclined sleep products in this
rulemaking, including objecting to
replacing the term ‘‘infant inclined
sleep products,’’ with the more general
‘‘infant sleep products.’’ Instead, these
commenters urged the Commission to
focus on inclined products for this
rulemaking and to review requirements
for non-inclined products in separate
rulemaking efforts. A commenter stated
that it is inappropriate to require all
products not subject to an existing
standard to comply with the bassinet
standard.
Response 12: The Commission
recognizes that bed-sharing is a common
practice of parents, both in the United
States and abroad. However, we cannot
recommend bed-sharing as a safe sleep
practice, due to the increased risk of
SIDS, overlay, and other hazards. AAP
safe sleep recommendations encourage
infants to room-share with parents, but
to provide infants with their own firm,
flat space, near the parents, but not in
the same bed. For a more detailed
discussion on bed-sharing, please see
CPSC human factor’s staff memorandum
at Tab D of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing
Package.
As discussed in section III of this
preamble, in response to the comments,
the Directorate for Epidemiology staff
identified 183 incident reports related to
non-inclined, flat products marketed as
infant sleep products, such as in-bed
sleepers, and compact bassinets. The
incident data, reported to have occurred
during the period from January 1, 2019
through December 31, 2020, identified
11 fatalities and 16 injury reports. Seven
of the 11 fatalities described a
suffocation death. The other deaths
involved the infant rolling over to a
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prone position, or rolling out of the
product and becoming entrapped. The
final rule identifies the flat sleep
products that fall within the scope of
the rule, provides incident data,
describes hazard patterns, analyzes the
effectiveness of the bassinet standard to
address the hazards, and compares the
performance requirements in
international standards to demonstrate
that these products have similar hazard
patterns that can be addressed by the
requirements in the bassinet standard.
Comment 13: Several commenters
urged the Commission to work with
ASTM to develop product-specific
safety standards for each of the
identified flat products, such as in-bed
sleepers, baby boxes, and compact
bassinets, and to do so in a separate
effort.
Response 13: The ASTM process for
developing the voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products took
close to 5 years before the standard was
published. The bassinet subcommittee
also has been working about 5 years to
add ‘‘compact bassinets’’ to the
standard, which has not been
completed. CPSC staff has participated
in these efforts and provided incident
data to the ASTM committees and task
groups. Throughout all this time,
inclined and compact infant sleep
products have entered the retail market
without meeting any safe sleep testing,
voluntary or mandatory. The incident
data discussed in section III of this
preamble (Tab B of Staff’s Final Rule
Briefing Package), and the engineering
and human factors analysis in section VI
of this preamble (Tabs C and D of Staff’s
Final Rule Briefing Package),
demonstrate that inclined, compact, and
in-bed sleep products pose risks to
infants and therefore, should not be
allowed to be sold as infant sleep
products without meeting one of CPSC’s
mandatory sleep standards.
Comment 14: A commenter stated that
no data indicate that overlay injuries or
fatalities exist while using an infant inbed sleeper.
Response 14: As part of CPSC staff’s
participation with ASTM voluntary
standards groups, in fall 2017 38 and
summer 2019,39 CPSC staff provided the
ASTM in-bed sleeper working group
with incident data that identified fatal
and nonfatal incidents involving in-bed
sleepers. This data demonstrated 11
fatalities and 22 nonfatalities associated
with in-bed sleepers. The primary
38 October 2, 2017 email from Hope Nesteruk to
Lisa Trofe and Meredith Thomas, JPMA contacts for
ASTM meetings.
39 Email dated June 4, 2019, from Hope Nesteruk
to Meredith Thomas, JPMA contact for ASTM
meetings.
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hazard patterns, consistent with the
incident data discussed in this final
rule, involved infants falling out of inbed sleepers, rolling into the side,
bedsharing, and consumer complaints.
An overlay hazard typically occurs
during bed-sharing, when a parent lays
over their infant, and typically does not
realize they have done so because they
are asleep. Accordingly, during task
group and subcommittee meetings, staff
expressed additional concerns with low
side height, soft-sided, in-bed sleepers,
because use of such products may
provide parents with a potentially false
sense of security when bed-sharing.
Based on this information, and bedsharing concerns generally, CPSC has
substantial concerns that a low, softsided, in-bed sleeper may not prevent a
parent from inadvertently laying over an
infant and suffocating the baby. CPSC
data for in-bed sleepers is anecdotal in
nature, and therefore, we may not have
received overlay incidents that involve
an in-bed sleeper, but the large number
of overlay incidents reported to the
CPSC generally indicate that bedsharing can be hazardous.
Comment 15: A commenter stated that
the 2019 SNPR is well-intentioned, but
that it is premature, and that the scope
of the rule ultimately may harm
consumer safety, because consumers
will use soft bedding and other tools to
replace an entire category of products
that effectively are banned under the
SNPR. The commenter stated that the
data necessary to support the rule is
either missing or incorrect. Another
commenter stated that the data on inbed sleepers, and the existing CPSC
sleep standards, do not support CPSC’s
approach in the 2019 SNPR, noting that
babies die in all types of infant sleep
products despite having an existing
standard, citing bassinets, cribs, and
play yards. Infants die for reasons not
associated with the product, the
commenter asserted, adding that CPSC
has not presented data to warrant all
infant sleep products without a standard
to comply with the bassinet standard.
This commenter maintained that CPSC
is using a ‘‘back-door method’’ to
remove infant products from the market
without the data to support or justify
this action. The commenter opined that
CPSC should write safety standards that
will ensure safe sleep for each product
type, and not funnel various products
into one standard, bassinets and cradles,
which was not intended for these
products.
Response 15: In coordination with a
range of stakeholders, CPSC has
carefully developed safety regulations
for five infant sleep products (cribs: fullsize and non-full-size, bassinets, play
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yards, and bedside sleepers), and we
encourage consumers to use these
products for infant sleep. The
Commission is aware that deaths occur
in these products, but as noted, infant
deaths are not always associated with
the product. We particularly urge
consumers to follow the AAP safe sleep
recommendations when using any
product intended for infant sleep. CPSC
data, in section III of this preamble (Tab
B of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package),
and evaluated in section VI of this
preamble (Tabs C and D of Staff’s Final
Rule Briefing Package), show that deaths
and injuries occur in untested and
unregulated infant sleep products,
including inclined and flat sleep
products, and sometimes these
incidents involve a use contrary to AAP
recommendations. However, CPSC’s
evaluation of the incidents in section VI
of this preamble demonstrates that
requiring currently unregulated infant
sleep products to meet the requirements
of the bassinet standard will further
reduce the risk of death and injury
associated with these products (Tab C of
Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package).
The argument that parents will use
soft bedding and other tools to replace
products taken off the market is the
same argument used in support of
creating a separate voluntary and
mandatory standard for infant inclined
sleep products, and infants died in these
products that did not meet AAP safe
sleep guidelines. Accordingly, to further
reduce the risk of death and injury, the
final rule requires that all products
marketed or intended as a sleeping
accommodation for infants up to 5
months old be tested and certified to an
existing CPSC sleep standard, and that
CPSC, the AAP, and the industry,
continue to promote and educate
caregivers about safe sleep practices for
infants.
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(b) Statistically Significant Data
Comment 16: One commenter
questioned whether the data presented
in the 2019 SNPR are statistically
significant for inclined sleep products,
or are the deaths due to SIDS?
Response 16: The analysis presented
in the 2019 SNPR and in this final rule
is based on reported incidents, and
therefore, anecdotal in nature. This
means that the data do not constitute a
statistical sample representing all
incidents related to inclined and flat
sleep products; nor do the data
represent a complete set of incidents
that may have occurred involving the
products. As such, no statistical
inference is possible. However, the data
do provide at least a minimum count for
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the number of incidents related to each
type of product reviewed.
Many of the fatality reports contain
unclear, conflicting, and/or inconsistent
information. For example, for some
deaths, medical examiners may have
concluded the cause of death to be SIDS
or Sudden Unexpected Infant Death
(SUID), but they also may mention cocontributing conditions, such as an
unsafe sleep environment (e.g., soft
bedding, inclined sleep surface) or other
pre-existing medical condition(s). This
can confound CPSC’s ability to
determine a predominant factor in the
fatality. Staff used a consensus-based
decision-making process to review
incident data. If an unsafe sleep
environment or a product design was
one of the factors, staff classified the
death under that category. Otherwise,
staff classified the reported incident
under the ‘‘undetermined’’ category,
when no one factor stood out, or staff
classified the incident under the
‘‘insufficient information’’ category,
when staff did not have enough
information to classify the incident in
another category to avoid overestimating
the risk.
(a) Additional Testing for Inclines
Between 10 and 20 Degrees
Comment 17: Several commenters
stated that the Commission should
conduct additional research on the
safety of inclines between 10 and 20
degrees for infant sleep products. A
commenter stated that CPSC has failed
to provide relevant data to support the
2019 SNPR’s approach regarding
inclined sleep products, to limit the seat
back angle to 10 degrees or less, and not
to conduct additional study on the 10 to
20 degree angle, or to provide
information or incidents to support this
decision.
Response 17: During the development
of the 2019 SNPR, Commission staff
contracted with Dr. Erin Mannen to
examine how the degree of a seat back
angle affects an infant’s ability to move
within inclined sleep products, and if
the incline angle directly impacts safety
or presents a risk factor that could
contribute to the suffocation of an
infant.40 The Mannen Study findings
showed that infants in products with a
seat back angle greater than 20 degrees
exhibit increased demand on their
abdominal muscles. The Mannen Study
concluded that this could lead to
increased fatigue and suffocation, if an
infant is unable to reposition themselves
after an accidental roll from supine to
prone. The Mannen Study concluded
that a sleep surface that is 10 degrees or
less, is comparable to a crib mattress
surface and can be considered a safe
sleep surface. The Mannen Study
suggested if future work were done on
safe sleep angles, one area of study
would be additional biomechanical
testing to determine ‘‘which, if any,
angles between 10- and 20-degrees may
be safe for infant sleep.’’
The Mannen Study recommendations
do not imply that an incline angle above
10 degrees may be safe; rather, the
Mannen Study merely suggests that if
higher angles are considered, additional
biomechanical testing is required. We
are not aware of existing research that
suggests that an inclined sleep surface
between 10 and 20 degrees is safe, nor
is CPSC currently conducting similar
research. The Mannen Study also stated
that its testing of awake infants was a
limitation because ‘‘while the muscle
use and motion may be similar, it is
likely that infants who find themselves
in a compromised position in an
inclined sleep product during a nap or
overnight sleep may not have enough
energy or alertness to achieve selfcorrection and may succumb to
suffocation earlier or more easily than
infants who are fully awake.’’ Given the
vulnerability of newborn infants and the
precedence of fatalities of infants who
were most likely asleep in inclined
products at the time of incidents,
additional research of inclines above 10
degrees is unnecessary for the final rule.
Additionally, other research 41 has
demonstrated a discernable difference
in infant ability between 5, 7, and 10
degrees in a side-to-side tilt, which
formed the basis of the 7-degree
maximum sleep surface angle in Health
Canada’s regulations and the 5-degree
limit in the Australian requirement. The
10-degree sleep surface limit in the final
rule is a slightly higher allowed sleep
surface angle than other countries.
Based on the Mannen Study and the
research that supports sleep surface
angles in international standards
reviewed by CPSC staff, staff believes
that it is unlikely that additional
research at angles higher than 10
degrees will demonstrate that an angle
greater than 10 degrees is safe for infant
sleep. Accordingly, for the final rule,
infant sleep products must be tested for
a seat back or sleep surface angle of 10
40 Read the full report from Dr. Mannen beginning
on page 91, Tab B, of CPSC Staff’s SNPR Briefing
Package: https://cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/
SupplementalNoticeofProposedRulemaking
forInfantSleepProducts_10_16_2019.pdf.
41 Beal SM, Moore L, Collett M, Montgomery B,
Sprod C, Beal A. The danger of freely rocking
cradles. J Paediatr Child Health. 1995 Feb;31(1):38–
40. doi: 10.1111/j.1440–1754.1995.tb02910.x. PMID:
7748688.
3. Degree of Incline
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degrees or less from horizontal, and they
must meet the requirements of the
bassinet and cradle standard.
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(b) Adopt Canadian Standard of 7
Degrees
Comment 18: One commenter stated
that Canada only allows up to 7-degree
seat back angle in sleep products, and
suggested CPSC should consider
adopting the Canadian standard.
Another commenter supported the
SNPR proposal that infant sleep surfaces
be no more than 10 degrees from
horizontal.
Response 18: The Mannen Study
concluded that a seatback angle of 10
degrees or less is safe. This seatback
angle is consistent with CPSC’s Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
which also requires a 10 degree or less
incline. We recognize that Health
Canada is using a 7-degree maximum
incline; however, that requirement is
based on a side-to-side tilt study of
infants in rocking cradles published in
1995. The 2019 Mannen Study
compared infant muscle and breathing
behavior on a flat crib mattress and on
a crib mattress, head-to-toe 10 degrees
from horizontal, and determined that
infant responses were essentially the
same on both sleep surfaces.
Accordingly, based on the Mannen
Study findings, to provide a safe sleep
surface, the final rule is consistent with
the current requirement in the bassinet
and cradle standard, requiring that
infant sleep products must have a headto-toe incline angle of 10 degrees or less.
(c) Highest Seat Back Angle Clarification
Comment 19: A commenter requested
that CPSC replace the phrase: ‘‘the
manufacturer’s recommended highest
seat back angle position intended for
sleep,’’ with ‘‘the seat back angle
position that is the highest position
intended for sleep or that is the highest
position that a reasonable consumer
would consider as being for infant sleep,
whichever is higher.’’
Response 19: The commenter’s
suggestion, by focusing on the ‘‘seat
back’’ of an infant sleep product,
illustrates some confusion with
terminology. The 2019 SNPR applied to
infant sleep products, and required all
infant sleep products to be 10 degrees or
less from horizontal–the same as the
sleep surface in bassinets. However, the
safe sleep principle requirement from
the Mannen Study, and already
reflected in the bassinet standard, is that
infants should sleep flat on their backs.
Accordingly, the SNPR term ‘‘seat back’’
created confusion, because the term
implies that infant sleep products are
for ‘‘sitting’’ in a device with a ‘‘seat.’’
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Thus, to reduce this confusion in the
final rule, we replace the term ‘‘seat
back’’ with the term ‘‘Seat Back/Sleep
Surface.’’
4. Safe Sleep Principles
(a) Request to Ban Infant Inclined Sleep
Products
Comment 20: Approximately 25
commenters requested that CPSC ‘‘ban’’
or ‘‘remove’’ infant inclined sleep
products from store shelves. Of those
commenters, three indicated that their
child died while sleeping in an inclined
sleep product.
Response 20: Many products with an
incline greater than 10 degrees from
horizontal have been removed from the
market through CPSC recalls. To
address newly manufactured products,
the final rule does not ‘‘ban’’ all infant
sleep products with an angle, but
addresses the hazards associated with
inclined sleep products by requiring
that any product marketed or intended
for sleep for infants up to 5 months old
must not have a sleep surface angle
greater than 10 degrees, and that any
currently unregulated infant sleep
product meet the bassinet standard. The
purpose of these requirements is to
ensure that all infant sleep products
meet minimum safe-sleep principles,
including the sleep surface angle, as
addressed through an existing CPSC
sleep standard.
(b) Aligning with AAP Safe Sleep
Practices
Comment 21: One commenter
acknowledged that the 2019 SNPR
aligns with the AAP’s safe sleep
recommendations, and encourages
CPSC to ensure that the proposed rule
sends a clear message addressing safe
sleep practices.
Response 21: The Commission is
committed to addressing safe sleep
practices in this rulemaking and
ensuring that all products marketed,
intended, promoted, or otherwise
indicated as being for any kind of infant
sleep for infants up to 5 months old are
addressed. Therefore, the final rule
requires that all infant sleep products,
including inclined and flat products, be
subject to 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
because part 1218 includes safe sleep
requirements. Additionally, CPSC’s
website provides extensive information
regarding best practices for safe sleep
through its CPSC’s Safe Sleep Campaign
and Baby Safety information at: https://
www.cpsc.gov/SafeSleep.
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(c) Use of Unsafe Products by Sleep
Deprived Parents
Comment 22: One commenter
expressed concern that parents,
particularly those who are sleep
deprived, cannot reasonably be
expected to use a product that is unsafe
by design in a safe manner.
Response 22: Lack of sleep may have
a detrimental effect on a parent’s
judgment when using an infant sleep
product. Research demonstrates that
fatigue can negatively affect memory,
concentration, and decision making.42
The final rule is the most effective
method of ensuring that infant sleep
products for infants up to 5 months of
age are safe for use.
5. Definitions
(a) Remove ‘‘Intended’’ From
Definitions
Comment 23: A commenter requested
that the word ‘‘intended’’ be struck from
the definitions of infant and newborn
sleep products.
Response 23: We disagree with the
request to remove ‘‘intended’’ from the
definitions. Manufacturer’s intent,
which can be evaluated through stated
warning messages, marketing photos,
product instructions and other factors,
must remain a factor for staff’s
consideration. As the commenter noted,
some products are marketed for
swinging or bouncing. If infant products
are not intended for sleep and are not
marketed in ways that imply they are for
sleeping or napping, they are not subject
to the infant sleep product standard.
CPSC will evaluate a manufacturer’s
intent using all available materials,
including marketing. Accordingly, the
final rule maintains the word
‘‘intended’’ and also broadens the
definition of an ‘‘infant sleep product’’
to include the word ‘‘marketed.’’
(b) Define or Clarify ‘‘Free Standing’’
Infant Sleep Products
Comment 24: One commenter
contended that ‘‘free standing’’ is an
ambiguous term.
Response 24: A ‘‘free-standing’’ infant
sleep product is a sleep product that can
be used by itself, without the need of
another product, such as a portable play
yard. ASTM F3118—17a contains a
separate definition for ‘‘accessory
inclined sleep product,’’ which applies
to products that are supported by
another product, such as a play yard.
The term ‘‘free-standing’’ is used
without issue in other ASTM and CPSC
standards. For the final rule, the
42 https://www.sleepfoundation.org/sleepdeprivation.
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definition of ‘‘infant sleep product’’ is
broadened to cover all inclined and flat
products marketed or intended as a
sleeping accommodation, regardless of
whether the product is free-standing or
attached to another product.
Accordingly, we removed the term
‘‘free-standing’’ from the definition of
‘‘infant sleep product’’ in the final rule,
to reduce confusion about which infant
sleep products are subject to the rule.
6. Warnings and Instructions
(a) Provide Information About Scoliosis
and Torticollis
Comment 25: One commenter
recommended that information about
deformities, such as scoliosis and
torticollis, be included on an insert with
all infant sleep products.
Response 25: Providing parents with
information and resources regarding
various infant deformities is beneficial,
and manufacturers are not prevented
from including this information if they
desire. However, as indicated in the
2019 SNPR, increases in the number of
children with plagiocephaly may
actually be attributed to the AAP’s
recommendation to place infants to
sleep on their backs to decrease the risk
of SIDS. The final rule does not contain
any modifications to the voluntary
standard to address this issue.
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(b) Placement of Warnings
Comment 26: One commenter
recommended that warnings should be
placed on the outside and inside of the
packaging, as well as on the product.
The commenter also recommended that
packaging should be labeled, easily
visible, and easy to read/understand.
Response 26: Consistent with the
2019 SNPR, the final rule requires that
infant sleep products not already subject
to a CPSC sleep standard, be subject to
the warning requirements set forth in
the bassinet standard, ASTM F2194–
16e1, which requires that warning labels
be present on the product and its
packaging, and that warning
information be present in the
instructional literature. ASTM F2194–
16e1 also requires that the warnings be
conspicuous, permanent, and easy to
read/understand.
7. Economic Analysis
Comment 27: A commenter suggested
that CPSC conduct an exposure study to
research the relative risks of these
different sleep products. This
commenter also suggested that CPSC
perform a full cost-benefit analysis of
the final rule.
Response 27: CPSC is continuing
research topics related to safe sleep,
which may potentially involve types of
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infant sleep products. Although an
exposure study is an effective means to
estimate exposure, we can estimate
exposure by comparing annual sales of
products to the number of live births,
and staff identifies the hazard patterns
from the incident data. The Commission
is not required to conduct cost-benefit
analyses under section 104 of the
CPSIA, and has not done so for any
durable infant or toddler rulemaking.
We are uncertain what the purpose of
such an analysis would accomplish for
a rule promulgated under section 104 of
the CPSIA, where cost/benefit
considerations are not germane to the
Commission’s rulemaking authority.
8. Effective Date
Comment 28: Commenters both
supported and opposed the 12-month
effective date. Some opposing
commenters supported a 6-month
effective date instead, because
additional time for the rule to become
effective puts infants at risk, while other
opposing commenters wanted a longer
effective date, or an indefinite delay
until ASTM completes additional
standards for specific products. The
2019 SNPR proposed that the effective
date would apply to products
manufactured or imported after the final
rule effective date. We received multiple
comments that the effective date should
apply to products sold after the final
rule effective date instead of the ‘‘sold
by date,’’ to prevent stockpiling and
remove the hazards as soon as possible.
Response 28: For the final rule, the
Commission will maintain the 2019
SNPR proposed effective date of 12
months after the date of publication in
the Federal Register. A 6-month
effective date may seem reasonable
because suppliers have had ample lead
time to prepare for this rule since the
SNPR was published in 2019, and many
of the products within the scope of the
final rule have been withdrawn from the
market or redesigned, particularly for
inclined sleep products. However, for
manufacturers of other unregulated flat
sleep products that remain in the
market, there will likely be a significant
economic impact as a result of this final
rule. While some suppliers can reduce
the impact of this rule by relabeling
their products as not for infant sleep,
not all manufacturers can simply
remarket the product if the physical
form of the product demonstrates that it
is intended for sleep. For some of these
products, manufacturers could relabel
them as intended for infants older than
five months, or, in some cases, for pets.
However, the demand for infant sleep
products for pet use is probably limited.
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The final rule is considered a
consumer product safety standard
issued under the Commission’s
authority in section 104 of the CPSIA.
Section 104(b)(1)(B). We are unclear
regarding what the commenters’ ‘‘sold
by’’ date references. The Consumer
Product Safety Act (CPSA) sets forth
requirements for manufacturers and
importers once a rule becomes effective.
Section 19(a)(1) of the CPSA states:
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person
to—
(1) sell, offer for sale, manufacture for
sale, distribute in commerce, or import
into the United States any consumer
product, or other product or substance
that is regulated under this Act or any
other Act enforced by the Commission,
that is not in conformity with an
applicable consumer product safety rule
under this Act, or any similar rule,
regulation, standard, or ban under any
other Act enforced by the Commission;
15 U.S.C. 2068(a)(1). Accordingly, the
CPSA provides that, as of the effective
date of the final rule, it is unlawful to
‘‘sell, offer for sale, manufacture for sale,
distribute in commerce, or import into
the United States,’’ any infant sleep
product, as defined in the rule, that is
not in conformity with the final rule.
9. Procedural Comments
(a) Products Subject to the Final Rule
Comment 29: A commenter stated that
the proposed rule would apply to
domestic products, and not to products
made overseas. The commenter stated
that the rule should apply to products
made overseas and sold in the United
States, for ‘‘optimal consumer safety.’’
Response 29: The commenter appears
to misunderstand the scope of products
subject to the final rule. If finalized, the
rule would make it unlawful to sell,
offer for sale, manufacture for sale,
distribute in commerce, or import into
the United States, an infant sleep
product that is not in conformity with
this rule, regardless of whether the
product was manufactured in the
United States or overseas.
(b) Incorporation by Reference
Comment 30: A commenter states that
the Commission should publish the
legal standard for infant sleep products,
rather than incorporate the standard by
reference. The commenter stated:
• Publishing the legal standard ‘‘will
advance fundamental principles of
fair notice and due process by
ensuring that the public has open and
unimpeded access to the law.’’
• The law belongs to the people,
regardless of who drafts the law, and
thus citizens have a fundamental right
to know what the law contains.
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• When the public is not informed
about relevant legal standards, this
has the potential for arbitrary or
discriminatory enforcement.
• People cannot comply with a law if
they do not know the substance of the
law.
Response 30: Section 104 of the
CPSIA directs the Commission to issue
standards for durable infant or toddler
products that are ‘‘substantially the
same as,’’ or more stringent than,
applicable voluntary standards. Thus,
unless the Commission determines that
more stringent requirements are
necessary to further reduce the risk of
injury, the Commission’s rules must be,
for the most part, the same as the
applicable voluntary standard. In this
case, the final rule would incorporate by
reference ASTM F3118–17a, with
substantial modifications to make the
standard more stringent, to further
reduce the risk of injury associated with
infant sleep products. This final rule
would set forth in the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR): Definitions, one test
for the seatback/sleep surface angle of
an infant sleep product, and otherwise
require infant sleep products that do not
already meet a CPSC sleep standard to
meet the requirements of the bassinet
standard, to further reduce the risk of
injury associated with inclined and flat
infant sleep products. CPSC’s bassinet
standard, 16 CFR part 1218, currently
incorporates by reference performance
and labeling requirements in ASTM
F2194–13, with modifications set forth
in the CFR. CPSC’s mandatory standard
is substantially similar to ASTM F2194–
16e1.
ASTM’s voluntary standards are
protected by copyright, which the
Commission (and the federal
government generally) must observe.
The United States may be held liable for
copyright infringement. 28 U.S.C. 1498.
Accordingly, the Commission cannot
violate copyright law by publishing
ASTM’s voluntary standards in the CFR.
The Office of the Federal Register (OFR)
has established procedures for
incorporation by reference that seek to
balance the interests of copyright
protection and public accessibility of
material. 1 CFR part 51. OFR’s
regulations are based on Freedom of
Information Act provisions that require
materials to be ‘‘reasonably available’’
when incorporated by reference with
approval of the Director of the Federal
Register. 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(1). Under the
OFR’s requirements, an agency may
incorporate by reference specific
publications, including standards, if
they are ‘‘reasonably available to and
usable by the class of persons affected.’’
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1 CFR 51.7. To ensure the material is
‘‘reasonably available,’’ an agency must
summarize the material it will
incorporate by reference and discuss
how that material is available to
interested parties in the Federal
Register notice. Id. §§ 51.3(a), 51.5(a).
Manufacturers and importers of infant
sleep products represent the class of
persons affected by the final rule.
Although any interested person has
access to the content of CPSC’s
regulations through Federal Register
notices of proposed and final rules, the
CFR, and the content of voluntary
standards on ASTM’s website, under the
statutory scheme set forth in the CPSIA,
it is those manufacturers and importers
who want to ‘‘sell, offer for sale,
manufacture for sale, distribute in
commerce, or import into the United
States,’’ any durable infant or toddler
product, that must conduct testing using
a third party conformity assessment
body (lab) and certify their product as
compliant with the applicable consumer
product safety rule. 15 U.S.C.
§ 2063(a)(2).
The Commission complies with the
requirement that publications, including
standards, are ‘‘reasonably available to
and usable by the class of persons
affected,’’ whenever incorporating
material by reference. For example,
when the Commission proposes a rule
under section 104 of the CPSIA, the
Commission describes and summarizes
the requirements of the rule, including
the voluntary standard, in the preamble
of the rule printed in the Federal
Register, and explains that ASTM’s
copyrighted voluntary standards are
available to review online for free
during the comment period at https://
www.astm.org/CPSC.htm. Once a rule
becomes effective, ASTM provides a
read-only copy of the standard for
review on the ASTM website at: https://
www.astm.org/READINGLIBRARY/. As
always, any person can purchase a
voluntary standard from ASTM, or may
schedule a time to review a voluntary
standard (for free) at the Commission’s
headquarters in Bethesda, MD, or at the
National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). Accordingly,
citizens who are interested in the
content of the law have unimpeded
access to the regulation, and have
several avenues for free access to the
text of voluntary standards incorporated
by reference into a mandatory CPSC
standard for a durable infant or toddler
product.
Comment 31: A commenter states that
CPSC’s practice of incorporating
voluntary standards by reference into
law forces citizens to either visit the
agency in person, or pay for access, to
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view the proposed law. The commenter
contends that CPSC’s actions to allow
public access to the proposal, including
summarizing the proposed requirements
in the preamble to the proposed rule,
making the voluntary standard available
for review at CPSC’s offices, or reading
the standard on ASTM’s website free of
charge, are all problematic, as the
regulations are not ‘‘reasonably
available’’ to the class or persons
affected. The commenter states that
ASTM’s restrictions on downloading or
printing the standard (unless the
standard is purchased) are an
impediment to accessing the law, and
describes the Commission’s access to
the proposed law as ‘‘limited’’ and
insufficient to ‘‘ensure robust public
access to the law.’’ Specifically, the
commenter notes that without the
ability to download graphs and charts in
the ASTM standard, the graphs are
unreadable in portrait view. The
commenter states that ‘‘reasonably
available’’ is not defined in the APA,
but should be interpreted broadly ‘‘to
promote fundamental constitutional
values. . . .’’
Response 31: We disagree with the
commenter that CPSC’s efforts to make
voluntary standards ‘‘reasonably
available’’ are ‘‘limited.’’ For rules
issued under section 104 of the CPSIA,
stakeholders have several ways to access
the content of the voluntary standard
proposed to be incorporated by
reference, and after the standard is
incorporated by reference into a
regulation, including reading a
summary of the requirements of a
voluntary standard in a proposed or
final rule (free), reviewing voluntary
standards in person at CPSC’s offices
(free), reviewing read-only copies of the
voluntary standard on ASTM’s website
(free), and by purchasing a copy of the
standard. The OFR’s regulations do not
require free access to the contents of
copyrighted materials. In developing a
regulation, the OFR considered whether
to require free access to materials that
are incorporated by reference into
regulations, and specifically declined to
do so. 79 FR 66267 (Nov. 7, 2014). The
OFR found that adopting requirements
to summarize the content of the material
incorporated, and explaining to
stakeholders how to obtain the material,
was adequate to make the material
‘‘reasonably available.’’ Id. at 66,270.
Accordingly, CPSC’s efforts to make
copyrighted materials reasonably
available exceed the OFR’s
requirements.
Comment 32: A commenter states that
incorporation by reference, without
providing free access to the law,
undermines due process because it may
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limit public input and exclude
meaningful participation by some
stakeholders. The commenter explains,
for example, that to participate in ASTM
standards development, one must be an
ASTM member, which costs $75 per
year. The commenter notes that the
regulated community can afford this
and participate, while members of the
public cannot meaningfully participate.
Response 32: Stakeholders have
several options to review the content of
a voluntary standard for free, as
described in response to comments 30
and 31. ASTM typically seeks a cross
section of stakeholders to participate in
standards development. While ASTM
requires membership to vote on balloted
items to create or revise a voluntary
standard, ASTM does not require
membership to participate in ASTM
meetings where stakeholders discuss
standards development for durable
infant or toddler products. Thus, if a
consumer wanted to participate in an
ASTM meeting, they could do so
without membership. Additionally, if a
consumer wanted to become an ASTM
voting member and cannot afford the
membership fee, that person can contact
ASTM to learn about additional options
for membership. For example, students
can be ASTM members free of charge.
We further note that CPSC’s
regulation at 16 CFR part 1031 does not
allow staff to participate in voluntary
standards meetings that are not open to
the public. CPSC staff’s participation in
ASTM meetings discussing durable
infant or toddler products are posted on
CPSC’s calendar (on CPSC’s website) at
least a week in advance. The meeting
notice provides the date, time, purpose
of the meeting, the staff attending, and
contact information for staff (to obtain
ASTM login information) so that any
person who wants to participate in the
ASTM meeting may do so. Moreover,
CPSC staff creates a written meeting log
for each ASTM meeting where staff
participates, which summarizes the
meeting content.
We encourage members of the public
to meaningfully participate in standards
development efforts for durable infant
or toddler products through the ASTM
process and by commenting on CPSC’s
proposed rules.
Comment 33: A commenter describes
a recent holding by the Eleventh Circuit
finding that annotations to a Georgia
statute were ‘‘sufficiently law-like’’ to
require free public access. The
commenter also describes two district
court cases challenging PACER system
fees, but notes the cases are in the early
stages of litigation, but ‘‘the underlying
principles of free public access to the
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law and legal proceedings are directly
relevant here.’’
Response 33: As described in
response to comments 30 and 31, CPSC
exceeds the OFR’s regulation requiring
that voluntary standards that are
incorporated by reference be made
reasonably available to the class of
persons affected, because the voluntary
standards incorporated by reference by
CPSC in rules under section 104 of the
CPSIA are available for review by all
interested parties. ASTM provides
access to review voluntary standards
incorporated by reference before and
after a rulemaking, free of charge, on
ASTM’s website. Additionally, any
person can schedule a time to review a
voluntary standard (for free) at the
Commission’s headquarters in Bethesda,
MD, or at the National Archives and
Records Administration (NARA).
(c) Alleged Notice and Comment and
Section 104 Procedural Defects
Comment 34: A commenter states that
the rulemaking process for including
flat products within the scope of the
2019 SNPR, such as in-bed sleepers, is
procedurally deficient and does not
follow the procedure for rules issued
under section 104 of the CPSIA, because
the Commission’s 2019 SNPR did not
include sufficient data demonstrating
the need for a rule to cover non-inclined
sleep products. The commenter states
that the data set for non-inclined
products is incomplete and
insufficiently reviewed, suggesting that
the Commission did not review incident
data for non-inclined products with the
ASTM committee. The commenter
states that the Commission’s failure to
publish a revised SNPR to include CPSC
staff’s concerns with compact bassinets,
baby boxes, and in-bed sleepers, as
described in a December 12, 2019 letter
from staff to several ASTM
subcommittees, which the commenter
states did not appear in the 2019 SNPR,
and to instead provide a 30 day
extension of the comment period, was
insufficient notice to all interested
parties, and may result in a flawed
standard that is unable to withstand
judicial scrutiny.
Response 34: The 2019 SNPR
provided notice to stakeholders that
unregulated, non-inclined, flat infant
sleep products were included in the
proposal, by proposing to remove the
term ‘‘inclined’’ from the standard, and
to include within the scope of the rule
currently unregulated infant sleep
products, including inclined and noninclined products. For example, the
SNPR states:
• ‘‘CPSC’s proposed standard would
cover products intended for infant sleep
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that are not already addressed by
another standard.’’ 84 FR at 60949.
• ‘‘CPSC proposes to define ‘infant
sleep products’ as products that provide
sleeping accommodations for infants
that are not currently covered by
bassinets/cradles, cribs (full-size and
non-full size), play yards, and bedside
sleepers . . .’’ Id. at 60950. Similar
statements are also made on pages
60951 (three times), 60956, and in the
draft regulatory text (proposed § 1236.1,
§ 1236.2(b)(4)(D) and § 1236.2(b)(11)(i))
at 60962–63).
• ‘‘The Supplemental NPR proposes
to incorporate ASTM F3118–17a with
substantial modifications, including
revisions in the scope of the standard,
section 1.3, to remove the term
‘‘inclined,’’ and to include any infant
sleep product not currently covered by
another mandatory rule for infant sleep
products. . . .’’
• The request for comments on page
60961 asks for comments on noninclined products likely to be impacted
by the SNPR, including, for example, a
request for comment on:
Æ ‘‘. . . any additional types of
products that commenters believe may
be impacted by the Supplemental NPR.’’
Æ ‘‘. . . products with inclines less
than or equal to 10 degrees that do not
already comply with the bassinet
standard.’’
Æ removing the upper age limit of 5
months because the SNPR ‘‘proposes to
address ‘infant sleep products’ not
already covered by traditional sleep
product [standards].’’
• The Staff’s October 16, 2019 SNPR
Briefing Package, referenced in the
Federal Register notice, contains similar
statements about the scope of the rule
(pages 15, 16, 21, 117, 136), and on page
133 also specifically states (and on page
134, Figure 1 provides a picture of an
unregulated flat sleep product):
The draft supplemental proposed rule
would also cover products with inclined
sleep surfaces greater than 30 degrees
and less than 10 degrees, if they are
intended or marketed for children under
5 months of age for sleep purposes, and
they are not subject to another sleep
product standard. For example, the draft
supplemental proposed rule would
include the hammock-style crib
accessory shown in Figure 1. It appears
to have an incline of 10 degrees or less,
but does not fall under another sleep
category.
CPSC’s description of the scope of the
rule throughout the 2019 SNPR and the
Staff’s SNPR Briefing Package, and the
request for comment on these products,
were sufficient to inform stakeholders
that these unregulated flat sleep
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products were included within the
scope of the rule.
In addition, ASTM members had
actual notice of the contents of the 2019
SNPR before and after publication.
Sections V.A.3 and V.B.2 of this
preamble discuss staff’s work with the
ASTM subcommittees and task groups.
Staff’s SNPR Briefing Package was
posted on the Commission’s website on
October 16, 2019, before ASTM held fall
meetings on voluntary standards for
juvenile products, and before the
Commission voted on the SNPR, so that
ASTM members and other stakeholders
could review the package, including the
Mannen Study, before the ASTM
meetings, and so that staff could discuss
the package and the Mannen Study with
ASTM members. The ASTM Agenda for
the Infant Inclined Sleep Products
meeting that occurred on October 21,
2019 included a link to Staff’s SNPR
Briefing Package. CPSC staff discussed
the 2019 SNPR Briefing Package at the
ASTM meetings in October 2019,
including with the ASTM
subcommittees for infant inclined sleep
products, in-bed sleepers, and bassinets,
discussing the Mannen Study findings,
as well as addressing the fact that flat
sleep products were covered by the
SNPR. Dr. Mannen attended the
subcommittee meeting for infant
inclined sleep products via telephone,
to discuss the Mannen Study and to
answer questions.
The SNPR published in the Federal
Register on November 12, 2019. In a
December 12, 2019 letter to both the
ASTM inclined sleep and bassinet
subcommittees, CPSC staff again
reiterated its concerns with weakening
the safe sleep requirements in the
voluntary standard for bassinets and
cradles to accommodate unregulated
products, such as in-bed sleepers,
compact bassinets, and baby boxes.
Thus, the letter represents an additional
effort to ensure that the relevant ASTM
subcommittees (and thus subcommittee
members) were aware of CPSC staff’s
concerns with these products, as well as
the content of the 2019 SNPR, which
proposed that flat sleep products would
need to meet the requirements of the
bassinet standard. Even though this
letter was in addition to, and not instead
of, the notice provided in the 2019
SNPR, the Commission extended the
comment period for an additional 30
days, to accommodate any confusion
among stakeholders. The final rule
addresses scope and data concerns
submitted by commenters on the
inclusion of unregulated flat sleep
products.
With regard to in-bed sleepers, baby
boxes, and compact bassinets
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specifically, ASTM members, which
include manufacturers of these
products, have been well aware of CPSC
staff’s concerns with these products for
years, based on activity on the bassinet
subcommittee which has been
developing requirements for these
products to include in the bassinet
standard, but has thus far been
unsuccessful. With regard to in-bed
sleepers, ASTM created a separate
standards development effort for this
product, which CPSC staff has
participated in, and provided incident
data on the products, including notice
of the injuries and fatalities associated
with these products. Indeed, through
staff’s participation in the ASTM
process, including attending meetings,
providing incident data, and providing
comments and votes on ballot efforts,
staff’s concerns with unregulated flat
sleep products, and the incident data
associated with these products, is not
unknown to stakeholders and these
commenters.
Comment 35: A commenter states that
CPSC statutes require the Commission
to defer to voluntary standards under
certain conditions, and that CPSC’s
website states that CPSC follows OMB
Circular A–119, but the Commission has
done neither in this case. Another
commenter states that the 2019 SNPR
did not rely on the ASTM consensusdriven process to develop a standard,
and that CPSC’s data cannot be
presented belatedly to ASTM
participants, after or at the same time as
the SNPR was provided to the
Commission. This commenter states that
while CPSC claims the process was a
collaborative one, for the 2019 SNPR,
the process was not.
Response 35: Rulemaking pursuant to
sections 7 and 9 of the CPSA requires
the Commission to rely on a voluntary
standard, rather than promulgate a rule,
if: (1) The voluntary standard
adequately addresses the risk of injury
associated with a product, and (2) there
is likely to be substantial compliance
with the voluntary standard. If either of
these criteria are not met, the
Commission may proceed with
rulemaking under sections 7 and 9 of
the CPSA, if the Commission can make
the other required findings. Those
criteria are not relevant under section
104 of the CPSIA, which requires the
Commission to consult ‘‘with
representatives of consumer groups,
juvenile product manufacturers, and
independent child product engineers
and experts, examine and assess the
effectiveness of any voluntary consumer
product safety standards for durable
infant or toddler products,’’ and to
promulgate rules that are substantially
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33055
the same as the voluntary standards, or
more stringent than the voluntary
standards, if the Commission finds that
more stringent standards would further
reduce the risk of injury.
Although CPSC staff’s standards
development work through the ASTM
process can colloquially be termed
‘‘collaborative,’’ nothing in section 104
of the CPSIA requires ‘‘collaboration’’
on a rule outside of the rulemaking
process. Under section 104, the
Commission is not required to ‘‘defer’’
to the voluntary standard, rather, the
Commission must promulgate rules, and
those rules must be substantially the
same as the voluntary standard, or more
stringent than the voluntary standard, if
more stringent requirements would
further reduce the risk of injury. Section
104 requires the Commission to consult
regarding the effectiveness of a
voluntary standard; the Commission is
not required to consult on the timing of
a proposed rule, the Commission’s
enforcement work, or on the content of
a proposed rule outside of the
rulemaking process. In the case of
bassinets, unregulated flat sleep
products, and inclined sleep products,
staff has been consulting on the
effectiveness of the voluntary standards,
or lack thereof, for these products for
many years.
Generally, CPSC staff’s work through
the ASTM process has improved the
safety of durable infant or toddler
products. However, nothing in section
104 of the CPSIA requires the
Commission to delay addressing risks of
harm to the most vulnerable infants in
sleep products that parents rely upon as
a safe place for an infant, until all
ASTM members have reached a
consensus on whether and how to create
or revise a voluntary standard to address
the risk. The Commission would be
relinquishing the statutory mandate to
protect consumers by ceding product
safety to the very industry Congress
required the agency to regulate. CPSC
met the requirement to consult on the
effectiveness of the voluntary standards.
The lengthy record of staff’s
participation with the infant inclined
sleep committee since the 2017 NPR is
available on regulations.gov, as well as
through ASTM records. A similarly
robust record of staff’s participation on
the bassinet and cradle committee,
outside of the rulemaking process, is
available through ASTM, on CPSC’s
website, and through CPSC’s Office of
the Secretariat.43
Finally, as reviewed in response to
comment 12, the final rule addresses
43 https://cpsc.gov/Regulations-Laws--Standards/
Voluntary-Standards.
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scope and data concerns submitted by
commenters on the inclusion of
unregulated flat sleep products, by
specifically listing the products
included within the scope of the final
rule in this preamble, reviewing
incident data and hazard patterns
associated with flat products, and by
demonstrating that the requirements in
the bassinet standard are adequate to
address the risk of injury associated
with flat infant sleep products. CPSC’s
description of the scope of the rule
throughout the 2019 SNPR and Staff’s
SNPR Briefing Package, and the request
for comment on these products
(including a 30 day comment
extension), were sufficient to inform
stakeholders that these unregulated flat
sleep products were included within the
scope of the rule. Moreover, the
Commission received comments on the
inclusion of flat sleep products within
the scope of the rule, demonstrating
knowledge of their inclusion.
Comment 36: A commenter states that
CPSC had been participating
collaboratively with the ASTM
committee for ASTM F3118 before the
summer of 2019, when the commenter
states the Commission rescinded its
rulemaking to adopt ASTM F3118 as a
mandatory standard, and to modify the
standard through the SNPR. The
commenter states that the better practice
would be to issue an advanced notice of
proposed rulemaking (ANPR) while also
seeking modifications to ASTM F3118
through the ASTM process, so that
stakeholders can ‘‘work with urgency’’
toward addressing CPSC incident data
to develop a performance-based
standard, versus a design restrictive
standard. The commenter also
expressed disappointment that CPSC is
‘‘subverting’’ the ASTM process, which
has a proven track record for resolving
product problems. The commenter
requests that CPSC ‘‘correct its course’’
and provide the relevant data to the
ASTM committee, so that the committee
can address the problems associated
with inclined sleep products through
the ASTM process. The commenter
requests that CPSC hold the SNPR in
abeyance while proceeding as the
commenter has suggested, with an
ANPR and working through the ASTM
process.
Response 36: Although staff
submitted an NPR termination package
for infant inclined sleep products to the
Commission on June 12, 2019, the
Commission never voted on the
termination package. Instead, the
Commission voted (5–0) on October 25,
2019 to issue the SNPR for infant sleep
products.
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Generally, CPSC staff’s work through
the ASTM process to improve the
requirements of voluntary standards to
address hazards associated with durable
infant or toddler products has improved
the safety of these products, and CPSC
will continue its work through the
ASTM process. Accordingly, CPSC did
not, and is not, subverting the ASTM
process to address the hazards
associated with inclined and flat sleep
products. CPSC staff has been
participating in the infant inclined sleep
product standards development process,
as well as the bassinet and cradle
standards development committee, for
many years, both before and after the
Commission issued the 2019 SNPR.
ASTM did not hold subcommittee
meetings or task group meetings on
inclined sleep products or the SNPR for
almost one full year after the October
2019 ASTM meetings, and did not
schedule any meetings until after CPSC
staff sent a letter to the ASTM
subcommittee for infant inclined sleep
products on July 16, 2020. After staff’s
letter, the ASTM F3118 subcommittee
established a task group to revise the
infant inclined sleep standard’s title,
introduction, and scope, to be more in
line with the proposal in the 2019
SNPR. In December 2020, the ASTM
subcommittee introduced ballot F15–18
(20–1) to change the standard’s title,
introduction, and scope to include all
infant sleep products (and not just
inclined sleep products). A more
detailed description of this ballot is in
section V.A.3 of this preamble.
However, in January 2021, the ballot did
not pass due to six negative votes. The
ASTM F3118 subcommittee discussed
the ballot results at a meeting on
January 27, 2021. During this meeting,
ASTM members disagreed on the intent
and consequences of changes to the
voluntary standard, and the meeting
ended without a consensus on a path
forward.
Based on the ballot results and the
discussions in these ASTM meetings,
staff advises that it is unlikely that
ASTM will be able to move forward
with changes to ASTM F3118 that
address safe sleep requirements in the
near term. However, we note that a task
group to review safe sleep requirements
across infant sleep product standards
(the comparison task group) has met
four times since the January 27, 2021
meeting. CPSC staff has participated in
all of these ASTM efforts, including
commenting on ASTM’s ballot.
The December 2020 ASTM ballot to
revise the title, introduction, and scope
of ASTM F3118, and the January 2021
meeting to discuss the negatives on the
ballot, demonstrate that ASTM members
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do not have a consensus on moving
forward to address the hazards
associated with infant sleep products,
despite CPSC’s 2019 SNPR and staff’s
continued participation in the process.
Although ASTM task groups continue to
work on revisions to the voluntary
standard, staff reports that the ASTM
process is not close to completing their
work, and staff was not confident that
ASTM would achieve consensus on
revisions to the standard in the near
term.
In a recent ASTM task group meeting
on revisions to the title, introduction,
and scope of the standard (April 22,
2021), task group members discussed
balloting the proposed regulatory text in
the 2019 SNPR to replace ASTM F3118–
17a, to prevent the sale of infant
inclined sleep products that purport to
certify to ASTM F3118–17a, meaning
products with an incline above 10
degrees, while ASTM works to revise
the voluntary standard. However, the
task group did not plan to ballot the
requirement that all infant sleep
products meet the bassinet standard,
because an ASTM task group is
attempting to identify minimum safe
sleep requirements that could apply to
infant sleep products to include in
F3118. Staff is participating in this effort
as well, but, based on the assessment in
this final rule, does not believe that
requirements that are different and less
stringent than the requirements in the
bassinet standard will adequately
address the risk of injury associated
with infant sleep products.
Section 104 of the CPSIA requires
CPSC to consult regarding the
effectiveness of the voluntary standard;
it does not require CPSC to consult on
the timing of rulemaking, the content of
a rule outside the rulemaking process,
or to delay rulemaking until ASTM
members achieve consensus. Moreover,
stakeholders have now had sufficient
time to consider and comment on the
Mannen Study, which has been
available on CPSC’s website as an
attachment to Staff’s SNPR Briefing
Package since October 2019, and how to
address hazards associated with
products within the scope of the SNPR,
through the rulemaking and the ASTM
processes. Despite having a year and a
half to make progress through the ASTM
process, stakeholders have not achieved
consensus on how to move forward.
When ASTM members do not have, or
cannot achieve, consensus on whether
or how a voluntary standard can address
associated hazards, product safety is not
improved.
The Commission’s statutory mandate
under section 104 of the CPSIA is to
ensure that durable infant or toddler
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product standards provide the highest
level of safety for such products that is
feasible. Accordingly, CPSC will not
delay the final rule, and section 104 of
the CPSIA does not require CPSC to
delay under the circumstances.
Comment 37: A commenter states that
the scope of the 2019 SNPR includes
many different types of products, with
different sizes, age capacities,
breathability, firmness, geometry,
perceived usage, and different warnings.
The SNPR did not explain CPSC’s
rationale to include all of these products
under ASTM F3118 and to conclude
that all of these products are unsafe.
Response 37: The 2019 SNPR stated
that the rule applied to all infant sleep
products not subject to a CPSC sleep
standard, including products with an
incline less than 10 degrees, as outlined
in response to comment 34. CPSC staff
has been participating on the ASTM
committees for bassinets and infant
inclined sleep for many years about the
hazards associated with products that
would fall within the scope of the final
rule. The infant inclined sleep product
standard and the developing in-bed
sleeper standard both evolved from the
bassinet standard, and ASTM is
currently trying to create new
requirements in the bassinet standard to
accommodate designs of certain flat
sleep products. Accordingly, as
provided in response to comment 36
regarding staff’s efforts through the
ASTM process, stakeholders understand
the scope of products addressed in the
2019 SNPR and the final rule, ASTM’s
efforts to modify the bassinet
requirements to accommodate these
products, and CPSC staff’s objection to
modification of the safe sleep
requirements in the bassinet standard.
To address comments on the 2019
SNPR, the final rule includes additional
incident data and analysis to
demonstrate that the performance and
labeling requirements of the bassinet
standard would address the risk of
injury associated with currently
unregulated flat and inclined sleep
products.
Comment 38: A commenter states that
CPSC followed the process set forth in
section 104 of the CPSIA when it issued
the 2017 NPR to incorporate by
reference into a mandatory rule, ASTM
F3118. The commenter notes that the
NPR was substantially the same as the
voluntary standard, and that CPSC staff
consulted with representatives from
consumer groups, juvenile product
manufacturers, and independent child
product engineers and experts, to
examine and assess the effectiveness of
ASTM F3118, as required by section 104
of the CPSIA. The commenter states,
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however, that the 2019 SNPR for infant
sleep products did not meet these two
requirements in the CPSIA. Instead of
consulting with consumer groups,
manufacturers, and product safety
experts through the section 104 process,
CPSC staff ‘‘informed’’ stakeholders
about the Commission’s change in
direction at the October 2019 ASTM
committee meetings, after the SNPR was
already issued. Moreover, although
CPSC staff remains engaged in the
ASTM F3118 subcommittee, their
engagement is in support of the SNPR.
The commenter maintains that the 2019
SNPR was not a collaborative effort, and
that CPSC did not consult with
stakeholders before issuing the SNPR.
The commenter states: ‘‘The stakeholder
community, impacted and potentially
impacted manufacturers, are in the very
unfortunate position of being subject to
a mandatory rule that they had no part
in helping to craft, by way of the ASTM
development process.’’ The commenter
also suggests that CPSC staff has acted
in an ‘‘ultra vires manner to sanitize
from incline sleep products’’ that are
otherwise subject to an existing
standard and to the rulemaking. The
commenter recommends that the
Commission issue another SNPR to
clarify the scope of the rulemaking and
evaluate and mitigate any unintended
consequences, and to allow time for
stakeholders and CPSC staff to work
through the ASTM process to examine
the impact of the proposed rule.
Another commenter similarly urges the
Commission to proceed in accordance
with section 104 of the CPSIA by
working with ASTM to develop a
standard with a clearly defined scope,
clear definitions, and creation of
performance requirements based on
specific product types within the infant
sleep product category. This approach
would require working with ASTM, and
then reissuing an SNPR, before
proceeding with a final rule.
Response 38: Section 104(b)(1) of the
CPSIA requires the Commission to: ‘‘(A)
in consultation with representatives of
consumer groups, juvenile product
manufacturers, and independent child
product engineers and experts, examine
and assess the effectiveness of any
voluntary consumer product safety
standards for durable infant or toddler
products;’’ and (B) in accordance with
the informal notice and comment
rulemaking requirements under section
553 of the Administrative Procedures
Act (APA), ‘‘promulgate consumer
product safety standards that—(i) are
substantially the same as such voluntary
standards; or (ii) are more stringent than
such voluntary standards, if the
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Commission determines that more
stringent standards would further
reduce the risk of injury associated with
such products.’’
The regulated community participates
in the rulemaking process by
commenting on a proposed rule. Neither
section 104 of the CPSIA nor the APA
requires that stakeholders craft a CPSC
mandatory rule. CPSC is required to
consult regarding the effectiveness of
the voluntary standard and to
promulgate rules. As set forth in section
V.A.3 and V.B.2 of this preamble, CPSC
staff has been consulting about the
effectiveness of the voluntary standards
at issue, infant inclined sleep products
and bassinets and cradles, for many
years, through participation with the
relevant ASTM subcommittees and task
groups. For example, since ASTM began
development of an infant inclined sleep
product standard in or around 2011,
CPSC has participated in the
development of the standard. Similarly,
CPSC staff has participated in the
development and revisions to the
bassinet and cradle standard since at
least 2002. For both standards, CPSC
staff has provided incident data,
participated in subcommittee and task
group meetings, and submitted
comments and/or votes on ASTM
ballots. For this final rule, CPSC has
reviewed the incident data, hazard
patterns, and the adequacy of the
voluntary standards to address the risk
of injury associated with products
within the scope of the final rule,
unregulated inclined and flat sleep
products, and is promulgating a rule
that is more stringent than the voluntary
standard, as proposed in the 2019
SNPR, to further reduce the risk of
injury associated with infant sleep
products.
ASTM members have now had ample
time to consider the hazards associated
with infant sleep products, to comment
on the SNPR, and to address associated
hazards through revised voluntary
standards. ASTM is still working on
these issues and staff will continue
working with ASTM to develop a
voluntary standard that addresses the
risk of injury associated with infant
sleep products. If and when ASTM has
revised ASTM F3118–17a, it may send
the revised standard to CPSC to
evaluate, through the update process set
forth in section 104 of the CPSIA.
Comment 39: Commenters allege that
the 2019 SNPR represents an
unprecedented effort by CPSC to issue
a mandatory rule that would create a
pre-market testing and approval process
for an entire product category.
Commenters state that creating an
omnibus rule that requires infant sleep
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products to meet the bassinet standard,
instead of creating product specific
standards, would have the unintended
consequence of stifling innovation.
Response 39: As with all of CPSC’s
regulations to set performance and
labeling requirements, CPSC’s
mandatory rules for durable infant or
toddler products set a floor for safe
consumer products. CPSC does not
require pre-market approval of
consumer products, nor does the agency
have the authority to do so. However,
CPSC does have the authority to create
mandatory performance requirements
through rulemaking, and to require that
all products offered for sale in the
United States meet these requirements
to protect consumers from injuries or
death. When the Commission is aware
of a gap in the regulatory framework for
infant sleep products, the Commission
can use its authority to address the
associated hazards.
Mandating a safety standard for infant
sleep products offered for sale in the
United States that are not already within
the scope of another CPSC sleep
standard is not ‘‘unprecedented’’ and is
no different than standards for other
durable infant or toddler products that
contain different product types within
the same standard, such as strollers and
high chairs, each of which include a
variety of product types. No company
can sell a stroller in the United States
that does not comply with the stroller
standard, simply based on the type of
stroller. Similarly, no company can sell
a high chair in the United States unless
it complies with the high chair
standard. This is not a novel idea. The
only difference in these product
categories is how the voluntary
standards evolved. The scope of the
stroller and high chair standards are
broad for the purpose of encapsulating
all products. Standards for sleep
products evolved on a different track.
But the Commission is not required to
continue a patchwork regulatory scheme
that does not serve the interests of
consumer safety. In this case, the
Commission seeks to ensure that all
products marketed or intended for
infant sleep, for infants up to 5 months
of age, meet the infant sleep product
standard to set a floor for safe infant
sleep. CPSC’s mission is to protect
consumers, and the agency will use its
authority to protect the most vulnerable
infants, up to 5 months old, and their
unsuspecting parents, from sleep
surfaces that do not follow known safe
sleep principles, as set forth in the
existing CPSC sleep standards.
Accordingly, the Commission’s effort in
the 2019 SNPR is consistent with
CPSC’s statutory mandate to protect
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consumers, and specifically, under
section 104, to promulgate standards for
product categories that the Commission
determines to be of the highest priority,
and to ensure that such standards
provide the highest level of safety for
such products that is feasible.
Because CPSC staff has been working
with ASTM members on the bassinet
and cradle subcommittee for years, on
both inclined sleep products, as well as
unregulated flat infant sleep products,
ASTM members should be well aware of
staff’s efforts and concerns with both
product types. Once CPSC issues an
NPR, CPSC’s docket on Regulations.gov
includes a record of staff’s participation
through the ASTM process, and ASTM
records should reflect this participation
as well. CPSC’s Office of the Secretariat
maintains meeting logs summarizing
staff’s participation with external
parties, such as ASTM, outside of the
rulemaking process, and these meeting
logs are searchable on CPSC’s website.
Finally, performance and labeling
requirements for consumer products
allow for innovation with certain
baseline safety requirements. While we
understand the concerns that innovation
beyond the baseline safety requirements
may be discouraged, we note the
development of infant inclined sleep
products as a prime example of
innovation preceding safety. Infant
inclined sleep products were first
marketed as an innovative sleep
solution for parents; however, no safety
standard existed for these products
when they were introduced to the
market. Commenters to the 2010 NPR
and 2012 SNPR for bassinets indicated
that hammocks and inclined sleep
products should have their own
standard because they could not meet
the requirements for bassinets, and
parents were likely to create their own
‘‘unsafe’’ alternative if a regulated
product was not available. The ASTM
standards development process for
inclined sleep products took many years
before the standard was published in
2015, and during that time,
manufacturers were designing and
selling innovative inclined products. As
time went on, the hazards posed by
inclined products became apparent in
the accumulation of infant deaths and
incidents associated with this product
category. To avoid a repeat of this
process, involving the most vulnerable
infants up to 5 months old, the
Commission is issuing this infant sleep
product standard that contains key
elements of safe sleep, so that product
innovation does not compromise safe
sleep for infants up to 5 months old.
Comment 40: A commenter states that
section 104 of the CPSIA does not
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permit the application of the bassinet
standard to an open-ended and
undefined scope of products. The
commenter contends that section 104
requires the Commission to consider
specific product types, characteristics,
and hazards. The commenter states that
the 2019 SNPR approach is ‘‘arbitrary’’
and ‘‘is a reversal of the Section 104
process’’ for existing and new products
that are sleep products, but not
bassinets or cradles. The commenter
states that CPSC must clearly define the
scope of the rule and the products that
fall within the scope of the rule.
Response 40: As set forth in response
to comment 34, the 2019 SNPR
provided notice that the rulemaking
included flat infant sleep products.
Moreover, the preamble to this final rule
identifies product types that fall within
the scope of the rule, as well incident
data, hazard patterns, and an analysis of
how the requirements in the bassinet
and cradle standard address the risk of
injury associated with flat infant sleep
products. The purpose of the rule is to
regulate any product marketed or
intended as a sleeping accommodation
for an infant up to five months old that
is not already regulated by another
CPSC sleep standard. Accordingly, the
scope of the rule is not ‘‘open-ended,’’
and the final rule demonstrates that the
bassinet standard provides minimum
safe sleep characteristics for these infant
sleep products.
Comment 41: A commenter states that
to implement a rule that requires
specific products to meet the
requirements of the bassinet standard,
CPSC must provide a rationale that is
supported by ‘‘substantial evidence.’’
The commenter states that the 2019
SNPR did not provide a rationale for the
application of the bassinet standard to
specific products within the infant sleep
product category.
Response 41: As stated in response to
comment 37, CPSC and stakeholders
have been working through the ASTM
process regarding requirements for
unregulated flat and inclined sleep
products for many years, as part of
development of the bassinet standard.
Accordingly, based on the 2019 SNPR
and this ongoing work with ASTM,
staff’s efforts have been to maintain the
safe sleep requirements in the bassinet
standard and apply them to all sleep
products marketed and intended for
infants up to 5 months old. In response
to comments, the final rule makes
clearer the unregulated flat sleep
products that fall within the scope of
the rule, provides incident data,
identifies hazard patterns, analyzes the
effectiveness of the bassinet standard to
address the hazards, and compares the
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performance requirements in
international standards to demonstrate
that products within the scope of the
final rule have similar hazard patterns
that can be addressed by the
requirements in the bassinet standard.
Comment 42: A commenter states that
the Commission previously recognized
the importance of product specificity in
promulgating the consumer registration
rule, 16 CFR part 1130. Despite this, the
commenter states that the 2019 SNPR
failed to discuss which product types
would be considered ‘‘durable infant or
toddler products’’ for product
registration card purposes, and ‘‘simply
concludes in a circular fashion that
infant sleep products are durable infant
or toddler products.’’ The commenter
believes that a specific rationale is
required for each product to
‘‘independently qualify’’ as a durable
infant or toddler product. The
commenter concludes that under the
APA, CPSC must specifically define
products that fall within an ‘‘infant
sleep product’’ in another SNPR before
it can issue a final rule.
Response 42: The preamble for the
final rule identifies product types that
fall within the scope of the rule.
However, the 2019 SNPR and the final
rule purposely do not define product
types by name in the regulation text,
and instead identify product types by
purpose and age limit, to ensure that all
infant sleep products meet minimum
safe sleep requirements in the bassinet
standard, including existing products
and future products.
Section 104(f)(1) of the CPSIA does
not require any further product type
specificity to identify these products as
durable infant or toddler products. The
statute defines a durable infant or
toddler product as ‘‘a durable product
intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by
children under the age of 5 years’’ and
then provides a list of products that are
durable infant or toddler products. The
Commission’s implementing rule at 16
CFR 1130.2(a) states:
DEFINITION OF DURABLE INFANT OR
TODDLER PRODUCT means the following
products intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by children
under the age of 5 years. The listed product
categories are further defined in the
applicable standards that the Commission
issues under section 104(b) of the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, and
include products that are combinations of the
following product categories . . .
Based on this definition in part 1130,
a product marketed or intended as a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months old is a durable infant
or toddler product. Because the
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products are intended for infants up to
5 months old, the products are
‘‘intended for use,’’ and ‘‘reasonably
expected to be used,’’ by children under
5 years old. Products intended for infant
sleep are similar to products on the
statutory list intended for infant sleep,
such as cribs, and bassinets and cradles.
Additionally, ‘‘infant sleep products’’
are further defined in the final rule.
Accordingly, adding ‘‘infant sleep
products’’ as a durable infant or toddler
product is consistent with the
Commission’s approach of adding a
durable infant or toddler product
category with a mandatory standard to
the list of products in part 1130, to
clarify that these products must meet
the consumer registration rule, and the
testing and certification requirements
for durable infant or toddler products.
Comment 43: A commenter contends
that the creation of specific types of
infant sleep products is not by the
Commission’s choice, but required by
section 104 of the CPSIA. The
commenter states that Congress
purposely listed different types of infant
sleep products separately in section 104,
because ‘‘differences between these
products warrant individual
consideration in any rulemaking
proceeding,’’ and that this principle is
true with the remaining infant sleep
product types.
Response 43: The commenter offers
no legislative history to support the idea
that Congress listed sleep products
separately because product differences
warranted individual rulemaking
proceedings. The products listed as
durable infant or toddler products are
examples of durable infant or toddler
products that Congress expected the
Commission to regulate by issuing a
mandatory standard. Most of these
products had existing voluntary
standards in 2008 when Congress
passed the CPSIA. Congress gave CPSC
the authority to add products to the list
of durable infant or toddler products,
gave CPSC the mission to protect
consumers, and instructed CPSC to
‘‘periodically review and revise the
standards set forth under this subsection
to ensure that such standards provide
the highest level of safety for such
products that is feasible.’’
Flat sleep products that are subject to
the final rule are not currently defined
or covered by any existing ASTM
standard. If CPSC could not use its
authority to expand the scope of a rule
to include such products, especially
when staff’s analysis demonstrates that
the existing bassinets and cradles
standard would address the risk of
injury associated with such products,
ASTM could dictate when and if
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durable infant or toddler products are
regulated by CPSC. Similarly, when
products fall within an ASTM standard,
CPSC should not be bound by ASTM’s
categorization of such products if CSPC
can demonstrate that the voluntary
standard is inadequate to address the
risk of injury associated with the
products, but another voluntary
standard would be adequate.
Comment 44: A commenter states that
CPSC must not only specifically identify
product types that fall within the infant
sleep product category, but must also
provide the rationale for applying the
bassinet and cradle standard
requirements to each product type
within the category, as well as
establishing the product type is a
durable infant or toddler product. The
commenter contends that this analysis
must identify the specific characteristics
for each product type and the related
hazards, to describe how the bassinet
standard would address each hazard
pattern. The commenter contends that a
requirement that may be applicable to
one product type may not be applicable
to another product type. The commenter
contends that ‘‘[n]o broad product
category to date has ever been subject to
a rule without such specificity.’’ The
commenter states this level of
specificity is required to avoid banning
existing safe products or chilling future
innovation.
Response 44: As set forth in response
to comment 34, the 2019 SNPR
provided notice that the rulemaking
included flat infant sleep products, and
multiple other efforts, including those at
ASTM, reinforced this. In response to
comments, the preamble to this final
rule provides further clarity, identifying
product types that fall within the scope
of the rule, including inclined and flat
sleep products, as well associated
incident data and hazard patterns. This
final rule also provides an analysis
demonstrating that the requirements of
the bassinet standard are adequate to
address each risk of injury associated
with infant sleep products, both flat and
inclined product types. As set forth in
response to comment 39, we disagree
that a rule under section 104 of the
CPSIA cannot have a scope that is
broader than one product type. For
example, many types of carriages and
strollers fall within the Safety Standard
for Carriage and Strollers. Strollers
offered for sale in the United States
must meet the requirements in this
regulation, regardless of product type.
The Commission’s statutory mandate
under section 104 of the CPSIA is to
ensure that durable infant or toddler
product standards provide the highest
level of safety for such products that is
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feasible. Congress specifically included
five products intended for infant sleep
in the statutory list of durable infant or
toddler products (full-size cribs, nonfull-size cribs, play yards, and bassinets
and cradles), demonstrating intent for
CPSC to regulate such products.
Currently, multiple flat and inclined
sleep products are not subject to a CPSC
regulation, but CPSC has the authority
to add ‘‘infant sleep products’’ as a
durable infant or toddler product, and to
regulate this product category.
Accordingly, the final rule regulates any
product marketed or intended as a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months old, that is not already
regulated by another CPSC sleep
standard. In response to comments, the
final rule expands the justification from
the 2019 SNPR to demonstrate that the
bassinet standard provides the
minimum safe sleep characteristics for
these infant sleep products. Finally, the
scope of the final rule is well-defined,
and allows a manufacturer to
intentionally design and market a
product as an infant sleep product, or to
choose not to design and market a
product as an infant sleep product.
VIII. Final Rule Establishing a Safety
Standard for Infant Sleep Products
This final rule establishes a children’s
product safety standard for infant sleep
products as a type of durable infant or
toddler product under section 104 of the
CPSIA. The Mannen Study and CPSC
staff’s analysis of the incident reports,
hazard patterns, and adequacy of the
voluntary standard, demonstrate that
ASTM F3118–17a is inadequate to
address the risk of injury associated
with inclined sleep products. ASTM
F3118–17a is inadequate to address the
risk of injury associated with inclined
sleep products, because it allows
products with a seat back angle greater
than 10 degrees, and does not address
additional hazard patterns associated
with inclined sleep products, such as
containing the infant. The Commission
determines that more stringent
requirements are necessary in the
mandatory standard to further reduce
the risk of injury associated with
inclined sleep products. Staff’s
assessment in the 2019 SNPR, and
section VI of this preamble, demonstrate
that the performance requirements in
the current voluntary standard for
bassinets and cradles, ASTM F2194,
which is incorporated into the
Commission’s mandatory standard, 16
CFR part 1218, is adequate to address
the risk of injury associated with infant
inclined sleep products, and will further
reduce the risk of injury associated with
inclined sleep products.
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As proposed in the 2019 SNPR, the
definition of an ‘‘infant sleep product’’
in the final rule also includes flat sleep
products, such as in-bed sleepers, baby
boxes, compact bassinets, and baby
tents, which currently do not fall within
the scope of any voluntary or mandatory
standard. Staff’s assessment of the
incident reports and hazard patterns
associated with flat sleep products in
this final rule demonstrates that the risk
of injury and death associated with flat
sleep products are similar, and can be
addressed by meeting the requirements
in the current voluntary standard for
bassinets and cradles, ASTM F2194,
which is incorporated into the
Commission’s mandatory standard, 16
CFR part 1218.
Accordingly, the final rule
incorporates by reference ASTM F3118–
17a as the mandatory standard for infant
sleep products, both inclined and flat,
with the following modifications to the
voluntary standard:
• Revise the introduction of the
standard, to state the purpose of the
standard is to address infant sleep
products not already covered by
traditional sleep product standards, to
reduce deaths associated with known
sleep hazards, including but not limited
to, a seat back or sleep surface angle that
is greater than 10 degrees from the
horizontal. This requirement is intended
to broaden the purpose of the standard
to more clearly address inclined and flat
sleep products, including known
hazards associated with infant sleep.
• Revise the scope of the standard, to
remove the term ‘‘inclined’’ and
broaden the scope to include infant
sleep products, including inclined and
flat sleep surfaces, marketed or intended
to provide a sleeping accommodation
for an infant up to 5 months old, and
that are not already subject to a
mandatory CPSC sleep standard:
Æ 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles, incorporating
by reference ASTM F2194, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for
Bassinets and Cradles;
Æ 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs, incorporating
by reference ASTM F1169, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for FullSize Baby Cribs;
Æ 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs,
incorporating by reference applicable
requirements in ASTM F406, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for NonFull-Size Baby Cribs/Play Yards;
Æ 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standard
for Play Yards, incorporating by
reference applicable requirements in
ASTM F406, Standard Consumer Safety
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Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby
Cribs/Play Yards;
Æ 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers, incorporating by
reference ASTM F2906, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for
Bedside Sleepers.
The purpose of this revision is to
more clearly establish the scope of the
final rule, which includes all products
marketed or intended for infant sleep for
children up to 5 months of age, so that
these products that are currently
unregulated must now meet one of the
mandatory standards for infant sleep.
• Revise the scope of the standard to
explicitly state that crib mattresses that
meet the requirements of ASTM F2933
do not fall within the scope of the
standard. This exclusion clarifies that
crib mattresses that meet the voluntary
standard do not meet the definition of
an infant sleep product, and are always
used in conjunction with a sleep
product, such as a crib or play yard, that
falls within one of CPSC’s sleep
standards. The final rule also modifies
referenced documents in the standard,
to add the voluntary standard for crib
mattresses, ASTM F2933;
• Modify the definition of ‘‘infant
inclined sleep product’’ to remove the
term ‘‘inclined’’ and revise the
definition to state that an ‘‘infant sleep
product’’ is ‘‘a product marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that is not subject to
any of the following:
Æ 16 CFR part 1218—Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles
Æ 16 CFR part 1219—Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs
Æ 16 CFR part 1220—Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
Æ 16 CFR part 1221—Safety Standard
for Play Yards
Æ 16 CFR part 1222—Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers
This requirement aligns the definition of
‘‘infant sleep product’’ with the scope of
the rule, including the intent of the rule
to ensure that all infant sleep products,
inclined and flat, are subject to a
mandatory CPSC sleep standard, to
address the risk of injury associated
with infant sleep products.
• Remove the definitions of
accessory, compact, and newborn
inclined sleep products because they are
no longer necessary and have no unique
requirements in the standard, because
all infant sleep products are subsumed
under the definition of ‘‘infant sleep
product.’’
• Modify seat back/sleep surface
angle so the maximum allowable angle,
as tested per the rule, must be equal to
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or less than 10 degrees from horizontal
in all positions recommended for sleep.
Although the bassinet standard also
requires a sleep surface equal to or less
than 10 degrees, the bassinet standard
does not have a test for the sleep surface
angle. Accordingly, infant sleep
products are required to test for the
sleep surface angle, in addition to
meeting the bassinet standard.
• Add a new requirement that infant
sleep products must meet 16 CFR part
1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, including conforming to the
definition of bassinet/cradle. As the
final rule analysis demonstrates,
conforming to the requirements in the
bassinet standard addresses the risk of
injury associated with infant sleep
products. Requiring products to meet
the definition of a bassinet/cradle also
ensures that the products meet the
requirement to have a stand.
• Remove all the performance
requirements except for the above new
or modified requirements.
• Remove all test methods except for
maximum seat back/sleep surface angle.
The name of CPSC’s final rule does
not include the term ‘‘inclined,’’ and
will be codified as 16 CFR part 1236,
Safety Standard for Infant Sleep
Products. Finally, as proposed in the
2019 SNPR, because infant sleep
products must meet the bassinet
standard, infant sleep products must
also meet the warning requirements in
the bassinet and cradle standard,
instead of those stated in ASTM F3118–
17a. 84 FR at 60956–57. An Appendix
to Tab C of Staff’s Final Rule Briefing
Package contains a redline of the final
rule changes, compared to the
requirements in ASTM F3118–17a.
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IX. Amendment to 16 CFR Part 1112 To
Include NOR for Infant Sleep Products
The CPSA establishes certain
requirements for product certification
and testing. Products subject to a
consumer product safety rule under the
CPSA, or to a similar rule, ban, standard
or regulation under any other act
enforced by the Commission, must be
certified as complying with all
applicable CPSC-enforced requirements.
15 U.S.C. 2063(a). Certification of
children’s products subject to a
children’s product safety rule must be
based on testing conducted by a CPSCaccepted third party conformity
assessment body. Id. 2063(a)(2). The
Commission must publish an NOR for
the accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to assess
conformity with a children’s product
safety rule to which a children’s product
is subject. Id. 2063(a)(3).
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The Commission published a final
rule, Requirements Pertaining to Third
Party Conformity Assessment Bodies, 78
FR 15836 (March 12, 2013), codified at
16 CFR part 1112 (‘‘part 1112’’) and
effective on June 10, 2013, which
establishes requirements for
accreditation of third party conformity
assessment bodies to test for conformity
with a children’s product safety rule in
accordance with section 14(a)(2) of the
CPSA. Part 1112 also codifies all of the
NORs issued previously by the
Commission.
All new NORs for new children’s
product safety rules, such as the infant
sleep products standard, require an
amendment to part 1112. Accordingly,
the 2019 SNPR proposed to amend the
existing rule that codifies the list of all
NORs issued by the Commission, 16
CFR part 1112, to add 16 CFR part 1236,
Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Infant Sleep Products,
to the list of children’s product safety
rules for which CPSC has issued an
NOR, because a final rule would be a
children’s product safety rule that
requires third party testing by a CPSCaccepted third party conformity
assessment body. 84 FR at 60957. The
Commission received no comment on
the proposed amendment, and is
finalizing the amendment as proposed
in the SNPR.
Test laboratories applying for
acceptance as a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body to
test to the new standard for infant sleep
products are required to meet the third
party conformity assessment body
accreditation requirements in part 1112.
When a laboratory meets the
requirements as a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body, the
laboratory can apply to CPSC to have 16
CFR part 1236, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Infant Sleep
Products, included in the laboratory’s
scope of accreditation of CPSC safety
rules listed for the laboratory on CPSC’s
website at: www.cpsc.gov/labsearch.
Part 1236 includes one performance test
to check for a seat back/sleep surface
angle that is 10 degrees or less, and then
requires infant sleep products to meet
16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles.
The new 16 CFR part 1236 for infant
sleep products should have sufficient
testing capacity by the effective date of
the final rule. The test to check the sleep
surface angle required in part 1236
involves use of the ‘‘Hinged Weight
Gage—Infant’’ identified in F3118–17a.
Because the gage is also used for testing
to the 16 CFR part 1223, Safety Standard
for Infant Swings (incorporating by
reference ASTM F2088), labs
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conducting infant swing testing will
already have the gage. Staff advises that
33 labs are currently CPSC-accepted to
test to the bassinet and cradle standard.
Of these 33, 19 of the labs are also
accredited to test to the infant swings
standard, meaning these labs have all of
the test equipment required to test to the
new part 1236. These labs should be
able to more easily become accredited to
test to part 1236. Also, labs that already
test to part 1218 bassinets, must only
acquire the test gage, which staff advises
is manufactured with readily available
metal and is estimated to cost $800.
Moreover, labs that previously tested to
the current ASTM F3118–17a for the
JPMA certification program have the
gage, because F3118 contains a test to
measure the seat back angle using the
gage. Finally, the effective date of this
final rule is 12 months from publication
in the Federal Register. Accordingly,
labs seeking to become accredited to
part 1236 have a full year to obtain the
necessary test equipment, become ISO
accredited, and have CPSC-accept their
accreditation to test to part 1236.
The Commission certified in the 2019
SNPR that the proposed NOR for infant
sleep products would not have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small laboratories. 84 FR
60959. CPSC expects that laboratories
that are already accredited to test to the
bassinet and cradle standard will find it
relatively easy to become accredited to
test to this standard, because the
primary substantive requirement added
by this standard is the sleep surface
angle. Moreover, CPSC did not receive
any comments regarding the NOR.
Therefore, for the final rule, the
Commission continues to certify that
amending part 1112 to include the NOR
for the infant sleep products final rule
will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small
laboratories.
X. Amendment to Definitions in
Consumer Registration Rule
The statutory definition of ‘‘durable
infant or toddler product’’ in section
104(f) applies to all of section 104 of the
CPSIA. In addition to requiring the
Commission to issue safety standards
for durable infant or toddler products,
section 104 of the CPSIA also directed
the Commission to issue a rule requiring
that manufacturers of durable infant or
toddler products establish a program for
consumer registration of those products.
Section 104(d) of the CPSIA.
In 2009, the Commission issued a rule
implementing the consumer registration
requirement. 16 CFR part 1130. As the
CPSIA directs, the consumer registration
rule requires each manufacturer of a
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durable infant or toddler product to:
Provide a postage-paid consumer
registration form with each product;
keep records of consumers who register
their products with the manufacturer;
and permanently place the
manufacturer’s name and certain other
identifying information on the product.
When the Commission issued the
consumer registration rule, the
Commission identified six additional
products as ‘‘durable infant or toddler
products’’ to add to the statutory list in
section 104(f)(2) of the CPSIA:
D children’s folding chairs
D changing tables;
D infant bouncers;
D infant bathtubs;
D bed rails; and
D infant slings.
16 CFR 1130.2. The Commission stated
that the specified statutory categories
were not exclusive, but that the
Commission should explicitly identify
the product categories that are covered.
The preamble to the 2009 final
consumer registration rule states:
‘‘Because the statute has a broad
definition of a durable infant or toddler
product but also includes 12 specific
product categories, additional items can
and should be included in the
definition, but should also be
specifically listed in the rule.’’ 74 FR
68668, 68669 (Dec. 29, 2009).
In the SNPR, the Commission
proposed to amend the definition of
‘‘durable infant or toddler product’’ in
the consumer registration rule to clarify
that ‘‘infant sleep products’’ fall within
the term ‘‘durable infant or toddler
product’’ as a subset of bassinets and
cradles, and must comply with the
consumer registration rule and section
104 of the CPSIA. CPSC received a
comment stating that the SNPR failed to
discuss which product types would be
considered ‘‘durable infant or toddler
products’’ for product registration card
purposes, and ‘‘simply concludes in a
circular fashion that infant sleep
products are durable infant or toddler
products.’’ The commenter believes that
a specific rationale is required for each
product to ‘‘independently qualify’’ as a
durable infant or toddler product. The
commenter concludes that under the
APA, the Commission must specifically
define products that fall within an
‘‘infant sleep product’’ in another SNPR
before it can issue a final rule.
We disagree with the commenter and
finalize the amendment to part 1130, as
proposed in the 2019 SNPR, to include
‘‘infant sleep products’’ as a durable
infant or toddler product, as a
subcategory of bassinets and cradles.
Based on the definition of a ‘‘durable
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infant or toddler product’’ in section
104(f) of the CPSIA, and in § 1130.2,
which define the term as products
‘‘intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by
children under the age of 5 years,’’
‘‘infant sleep products’’ are a durable
infant or toddler product. ‘‘Infant sleep
products’’ are defined in the final rule
as a product marketed or intended as a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months old. Accordingly, the
products are ‘‘intended for use,’’ and
‘‘reasonably expected to be used,’’ by
children under 5 years old. Moreover,
products intended for infant sleep are
similar to products on the statutory list
intended for infant sleep, such as cribs,
bassinets and cradles. Moreover, ‘‘infant
sleep products’’ are further defined in
the final rule. Finally, as discussed in
section V of this preamble, the Safety
Standard for Infant Sleep Products, for
both inclined and flat sleep products, is
an outgrowth of efforts to develop a
safety standard for bassinets and
cradles, and may be considered a
subcategory of bassinets. To provide
greater clarity that inclined sleep
products are durable infant or toddler
products subject to the consumer
registration rule, as well as third party
testing and certification requirements
for durable infant or toddler products,
the Commission finalizes the
amendment to 16 CFR 1130.2(a)(12), as
proposed, to explicitly include ‘‘infant
sleep products’’ as a subcategory of
bassinets and cradles.
XI. Incorporation by Reference
Section 1236.2(a) of the final rule
provides that each infant sleep product
must comply with applicable provisions
of ASTM F3118–17a. The Office of the
Federal Register (OFR) has regulations
concerning incorporation by reference. 1
CFR part 51. For a final rule, agencies
must discuss in the preamble to the rule
the way in which materials that the
agency incorporates by reference are
reasonably available to interested
persons, and how interested parties can
obtain the materials. Additionally, the
preamble to the rule must summarize
the material. 1 CFR 51.5(b).
In accordance with the OFR’s
requirements, sections VI.A and VIII of
this preamble summarize the provisions
of ASTM F3118–17a that the
Commission is incorporating by
reference. ASTM F3118–17a is
copyrighted. Before the effective date of
this rule, you may view a copy of ASTM
F3118–17a at: https://www.astm.org/
cpsc.htm. Once the rule becomes
effective, ASTM F3118–17a can be
viewed free of charge as a read-only
document at: https://www.astm.org/
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READINGLIBRARY/. To download or
print the standard, interested persons
may purchase a copy of ASTM F3118–
17a from ASTM, through its website
(https://www.astm.org), or by mail from
ASTM International, 100 Bar Harbor
Drive, P.O. Box 0700, West
Conshohocken, PA 19428; https://
www.astm.org. Alternatively, interested
parties may inspect a copy of the
standard free of charge by contacting
Alberta E. Mills, Division of the
Secretariat, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East-West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: 301–504–7479; email: cpscos@cpsc.gov.
XII. Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) generally requires that the
effective date of a rule be at least 30
days after publication of the final rule.
5 U.S.C. 553(d). CPSC generally
considers 6 months to be sufficient time
for suppliers of durable infant and
toddler products to come into
compliance with a new standard under
section 104 of the CPSIA. Six months is
also the period that the Juvenile
Products Manufacturers Association
(JPMA) typically allows for products in
the JPMA certification program to
transition to a new standard once that
standard is published.
The 2019 SNPR proposed 12-month
effective date after publication of the
final rule, for products manufactured or
imported on or after that date, because:
(1) the Commission was proposing to
incorporate by reference, ASTM F3118–
17a, a relatively new voluntary standard
that covers a variety of products whose
manufacturers may not be aware that
their product must comply; and (2) the
Commission proposed to make
substantial modifications to ASTM
F3118–17a, and a 12-month effective
date would allow time for infant sleep
product manufacturers to bring their
products into compliance after a final
rule is issued. 84 FR 60958. The 2019
SNPR stated that the Commission
expects that most firms should be able
to comply within the 12-month
timeframe. The 2019 SNPR also
requested comment on the proposed 12month effective date, because of the
hazards involved with infant inclined
sleep products, and stated that the final
rule could issue with a shorter effective
date, so that safer products would be
available sooner. Id.
The 2019 SNPR commenters both
supported and opposed the 12-month
effective date. Some commenters
supported a 6-month effective date,
urging that additional time for the rule
to become effective puts infants at risk.
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Other commenters requested a longer
effective date, or an indefinite delay of
the rulemaking, until ASTM completes
additional standards for specific
products covered by the final rule.
For the final rule, the Commission
will maintain the 2019 SNPR proposed
effective date of 12 months after the date
of publication in the Federal Register.
Accordingly, as of the effective date of
the final rule, it is unlawful to ‘‘sell,
offer for sale, manufacture for sale,
distribute in commerce, or import into
the United States,’’ any infant sleep
product, as defined in the rule, that is
not in conformity with the final rule. 15
U.S.C. 2068(a)(1).
A 6-month effective date may seem
reasonable because suppliers have had
ample lead time to prepare for this rule
since the SNPR was published in 2019,
and many of the products within the
scope of the final rule have been
withdrawn from the market or
redesigned, particularly for inclined
sleep products. However, some
manufacturers of flat sleep products that
remain in the market will likely
experience a significant economic
impact as a result of this final rule.
While some suppliers can reduce the
impact of this rule by relabeling their
products as not for infant sleep, not all
manufacturers can simply remarket the
product if the physical form of the
product demonstrates that it is intended
for sleep. For some of these products,
manufacturers could relabel them as
intended for infants older than five
months, or, in some cases, for pets.
However, the demand for infant sleep
products for pet use is probably limited.
Accordingly, maintaining the proposed
12-month effective date will provide
manufacturers and importers time to
spread the impact of the rule over a 12
month time period, to reduce the
economic impact of the final rule.
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XIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
A. Introduction
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
5 U.S.C. 601–612, requires that agencies
review a proposed rule and a final rule
for the rule’s potential economic impact
on small entities, including small
businesses. Section 604 of the RFA
generally requires that agencies prepare
a final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) when promulgating final rules,
unless the head of the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Staff prepared
a FRFA that is available at Tab E of
Staff’s Final Rule Briefing Package.
The scope of this FRFA and the
number of firms impacted is different
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from the Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) that accompanied the
2017 NPR, because the scope of the NPR
was inclined sleep products, while the
scope of the final rule is infant sleep
products, defined in the final rule as
products that are marketed or intended
to provide sleeping accommodations for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
are not already covered by a mandatory
CPSC sleep standard: Full-size cribs,
non-full-size cribs, play yards, bassinets
and cradles, or bedside sleepers. This
change in scope from the proposed rule
was specified in the 2019 SNPR, and
includes inclined and non-inclined
(flat) infant sleep products. Some
inclined sleep products have been
recalled or otherwise voluntarily
removed from the market since 2019, so
some firms that were forecast to be
impacted in the IRFA are not likely to
be impacted by this final rule, because
the firms have already stopped selling
those products. However, a significant
economic impact is possible for
suppliers of flat sleep products that
were not analyzed in the IRFA, as well
as remaining suppliers of inclined
products. Flat sleep products without
inclined sleep surfaces include: Baby
boxes, compact and travel bassinets that
do not meet the bassinet standard, inbed sleepers, baby tents marketed for
infant sleep, baby pods, and baby nests.
Pursuant to the final rule, firms whose
infant sleep products do not comply
with any CPSC sleep standard will need
to evaluate their products, determine
what changes would be required to meet
an existing CPSC standard, or 16 CFR
part 1218, the Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles, and decide how
to proceed. Noncompliant products
would need to be removed from the U.S.
market, modified to meet the mandatory
standard as specified in this final rule,
remarketed for children older than 5
months, or remarketed as not intended
for infant sleep. New infant sleep
products introduced to the market
would also need to comply with the
standard, or one of the other CPSC sleep
standards. The final rule defines an
‘‘infant sleep product’’ as a product
marketed or intended to provide a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months of age, and that does not
already meet a mandatory CPSC sleep
standard. CPSC interprets this definition
to include products that are marketed
for ‘‘napping,’’ ‘‘snoozing,’’ ‘‘dreaming,’’
or any other word that implies sleeping,
or that are called a ‘‘bed,’’ and items
marketed with a picture of a sleeping
infant, to be an infant sleep product.
Based on the staff’s analysis, the
Commission anticipates a possible
significant economic impact for twelve
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small importers and nine small
domestic manufacturers that supply
infant sleep products to the U.S. market,
as well as for hundreds of home-based
small businesses that ship from the U.S.
We provide a summary of the FRFA
below.
B. The Market for Infant Sleep Products
Section II of this preamble describes
the infant sleep products within the
scope of the final rule, the products
excluded from the final rule, and a
description of the market for infant
sleep products, including a summary of
retail prices for various types of infant
sleep products.
C. Products and Small Entities to Which
the Final Rule Would Apply
1. Overview of Products Covered by,
and Excluded From, the Final Rule
Section II.A and B of this preamble
describe the products subject to, and
excluded from, the final rule. This rule
is intended to cover ‘‘infant sleep
products,’’ defined in the final rule as
products that are marketed or intended
to provide a sleeping accommodation
for an infant up to 5 months of age, and
that are not already covered by a
mandatory CPSC sleep standard: Fullsize cribs, non-full-size cribs, play
yards, bassinets and cradles, or bedside
sleepers. A detailed description of the
products covered by the final rule is set
forth in section II.C of this preamble,
and includes:
• Inclined products, such as: Hard
frame inclined sleepers, compact
foam inclined sleepers, inclined play
yard accessories, and baby hammocks;
and
• Flat products, such as: Soft-sided
products (baby pods and baby nests,
soft-sided travel bassinets or travel
beds, hand-held carriers marketed for
sleep, and in-bed sleepers), rigidsided and rigid-framed compact
bassinets, travel bassinets, and similar
products (baby boxes, compact,
portable, or travel bassinets, or infant
travel beds), and baby tents.
None of these products is covered by an
existing CPSC sleep standard. CPSC
considers that any items marketed for
‘‘napping,’’ ‘‘snoozing,’’ or ‘‘dreaming,’’
or any other word that implies sleeping,
or that are called a ‘‘bed,’’ as well as
items marketed with a picture of a
sleeping infant, to be an infant sleep
product.
Products that are subject to another
CPSC sleep standard, or to another
durable infant or toddler product rule
that is not marketed for sleep, such as
infant bouncers or swings, are not
subject to the final rule. Moreover, a crib
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mattress, as defined in ASTM F2933–19,
is not an infant sleep product covered
by the final rule.
2. Suppliers to This Market
Manufacturers of infant sleep
products are categorized under many
different North American Classification
System (NAICS) categories, because
there is not a NAICS code specifically
for infant sleep products. These items
are made by companies that have baby
furniture, baby bedding items,
mattresses, other durable baby items
including strollers or car seats, toys, or
general merchandise as their primary
business. Businesses are generally
considered small per the Small Business
Administration (SBA) size standards if
they have fewer than 100 employees for
importers or wholesalers, or fewer than
500 employees for most of the relevant
types of manufacturers for this rule. The
SBA size standard for mattress
manufacturing is 1,000 employees. The
relevant NAICS codes include:
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314999 (All Other Miscellaneous Textile
Product Mills)
337910 (Mattress Manufacturing)
339930 (Doll, Toy, and Game Manufacturing)
339999 (All Other Miscellaneous
Manufacturing)
423220 (Home Furnishing Merchant
Wholesalers)
424330 (Women’s, Children’s, and Infants’
Clothing and Accessories Merchant
Wholesalers)
The SBA size standards for ‘‘small’’
for the relevant NAICS codes mean that
most suppliers in this product category
are considered ‘‘small.’’ A U.S. company
that has a factory employing 100 people
might be a top 10 supplier in a
particular infant sleep product category,
but would be considered ‘‘small’’ by
SBA standards. Similarly, an importer
with a U.S. warehouse staff of 50 people
would also be considered ‘‘small.’’
Prior to the recalls of some infant
inclined sleep products, large domestic
and foreign companies and the larger
‘‘small’’ companies by SBA size
standards were responsible for most of
the sales volume for the hard frame
inclined sleep products and inclined
play yard sleeper accessories. Many of
the inclined sleep products were
available at big box chain retailers, and
a few were available at mattress
retailers. The larger companies have
recalled or discontinued these products,
and most big box stores have stopped
stocking them. However, inclined sleep
products are still available from small
manufacturers and importers, and
discontinued items made by large
companies are still available from
online merchants. Small companies
have always accounted for a majority of
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the suppliers of the unregulated flatbottomed sleep products and infant
hammock categories. A large number of
suppliers exist for these products; the
market is fragmented with many sellers.
Many of the products covered by the
final rule, particularly the soft-sided
products and the products sold by small
businesses, are only available online.
The majority of the suppliers to which
this final rule would apply are small by
SBA standards. At least 60 small U.S.based manufacturers and importers are
in this market, as well as 5 large
domestic companies, and dozens of
foreign companies, some of which ship
these items directly to customers in the
U.S. via online marketplaces. In
addition, more than a thousand homebased businesses supply flat sleep
products that would be subject to the
final rule, of which hundreds ship from
the U.S. Some firms sell these items
under multiple brand names and
models, including small manufacturers
that make ‘‘store brands’’ for larger
companies. The number of importers
selling flat sleep products is
approximate because the proliferation of
online retail makes it possible for
importers to quickly change their
product offerings based on demand for
particular products. The number of
foreign companies is approximate for
the same reason. In addition to the
foreign companies that ship from U.S.
distribution sites, dozens of third-party
sellers are on major internet retail sites
that ship products to U.S. consumers
directly from a foreign country. The
analysis in this FRFA focuses on the
impact on small U.S. manufacturers and
importers that ship from the U.S., as
well as U.S.-based home businesses, but
the large and foreign companies will
also be impacted by the cost of
complying with this rule. The large
number of companies in the flat sleep
products market covered by this rule
reflects both a strong market demand for
these products and a competitive market
with relatively low margins.
D. Testing and Certification
Under section 14 of the CPSA, once
the new infant sleep product mandatory
standard become effective, all suppliers
will be subject to the third party testing
and certification requirements under the
CPSA and the Testing and Labeling
Pertaining to Product Certification rule
(16 CFR 1107), which requires that
manufacturers and importers certify that
their products comply with the
applicable children’s product safety
standards, based on third party testing,
and subject their products to third party
testing periodically. Third party testing
costs are in addition to the costs of
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modifying the infant sleeper products to
meet the standard.
For infant sleep products, the thirdparty testing costs are expected to be
about $1,500 per testing cycle per
model, including both the costs of the
testing and the costs of the samples to
be tested. This is consistent with the
IRFA in the SNPR, which estimated a
cost of $1,100 for testing alone, not
including the cost of the samples to be
tested; we did not receive any
comments on the SNPR providing a
different estimate. Based on comments
received on the bassinet and cradle final
rule published in 2013, one-time costs
of redesigning a product to meet the
standard could be as high as $500,000
for products requiring major redesign.
As allowed by the component part
testing rule (16 CFR 1109), importers
may rely upon third party tests obtained
by their suppliers, which could reduce
the impact on importers. In addition, all
businesses selling products covered by
this rule were already required to certify
compliance to general children’s
product rules for lead, phthalates, and
small parts with third party testing, so
those third-party testing costs would not
be considered new costs of compliance
for this rule.
E. Impact of Final Rule by Product
Category
The impact on small businesses
would vary by product category. We
describe each product, provide
information on the types of firms that
supply the product, and describe the
impacts for each product type for
complying with this rule or taking
action to exit the market sector.
1. Inclined Sleep Products
(a) Hard Frame Inclined Sleepers,
Compact Foam Inclined Sleepers, and
Play Yard Accessories
Since the NPR was published in 2017,
some inclined sleep products have been
recalled or otherwise removed from the
market. However, while resale of
recalled products is prohibited,
discontinued items that were not
recalled are still available on the
secondary market, as well as additional
physically similar products sold by
small companies that were not recalled.
JPMA has two manufacturers that are
certified as compliant to the current
ASTM F3118 standard for inclined
sleepers. While larger companies have
removed most of their inclined products
from the market or remarketed them as
chairs or loungers, some smaller
importers and foreign direct shippers
still offer them as sleep products. Some
play yards with inclined sleep
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accessories are still available. To date,
the lack of a CPSC mandatory standard
means that new entrants are free to enter
this market sector with new inclined
sleep products that do not comply with
the existing ASTM standard, ASTM
F3118–17a, or any other ASTM or CPSC
sleep standard. Many of the recalled
items were still available from smaller
internet merchants in the spring and
summer of 2020. Some items that were
not recalled, but merely discontinued by
the manufacturer, are still available for
sale from retailers, at least until the
remaining stock is sold.
Once the final rule is published and
becomes effective, suppliers of inclined
sleep products must either redesign
existing products to comply with the
standard and conduct third-party testing
to demonstrate compliance, stop selling
the products, or remarket the products
as not intended for infant sleep. The
impact of those options will depend
upon how much redesign the product
requires, and what portion of the
company’s sales are inclined sleep
products. The impact on small
companies that sell many different
products in different categories, which
is relatively common, especially for
importers, will likely not be as
significant as the impact on small
companies that sell only a few types of
products or that concentrate on sleep
products covered by this rule.
The impact of remarketing products
for a different use, such as for an older
child, a pet, or not for sleep, will
depend on the extent to which
consumers demand the product for the
different use. Given the proliferation of
floor chairs, lounger chairs, rockers, and
bouncer seats on the market, it seems
likely that consumers find value in
physically similar products that are
marketed for a different use, and that
remarketing will not reduce demand.
U.S. sales of the combined category of
bouncer seats, rockers, and sleepers
totaled more than 2 million units and
$126 million dollars in 2018.44
Suppliers of the hard-plastic framed
rocker-type items may choose to
redesign their items to meet the
requirements of a different mandatory
safety standard, particularly the one for
infant bouncer seats. Most of the hardframed products were made by large or
foreign companies, although the market
44 Baby feeding, care, and travel accessory unit
sales in the United States in 2018, by product
type—https://www.statista.com/statistics/891908/
baby-feeding-care-and-travel-accessory-unit-salesby-product-type-us/ And Baby feeding, care, and
travel accessory sales in the United States in 2018,
by product type https://www.statista.com/statistics/
891889/baby-feeding-care-and-travel-accessorysales-by-product-type-us/.
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volume has shifted to smaller
companies as the larger companies have
already removed these items from the
market or remarketed them as chairs,
rockers, or chair/swing combos. Two
small domestic companies that make
inclined sleep products may experience
a significant economic impact 45 as these
were some of their best-selling products,
and one of them also supplied the
product as a ‘‘store brand’’ to another
company. The other sells multiple types
of sleepers within the scope of the final
rule. Redesigning, relabeling, or
discontinuing the products could be a
significant impact on these firms. The
rest of the small domestic companies
that sold this product and small
importers will likely not be significantly
impacted because they sell many other
products that would not be subject to
the final rule.
Suppliers of inclined compact foam
products will need to redesign their
products with an incline of 10 degrees
or less and meet other requirements of
this standard, remove these products
from the market, or relabel them as not
being intended for sleep by children
under 5 months of age. Some of these
products have restraining harnesses to
keep the infant from sliding down on
the slanted product, which is not
compliant with any of the existing CPSC
sleep standards. Some suppliers have
already remarketed the products as
loungers or floor chairs without
changing the design. Several of the
companies that sell these products sell
larger wedge pillow products for adults
and older children as ‘‘body pillows’’ or
sleeping positioners, so the infant sleep
products are not their only product line.
Redesign or remarketing could have a
significant impact for the three small
domestic companies and one importer
that have such products, as well as other
products in the scope of this rule, as a
large portion of their product line.
Suppliers of inclined play yard
accessories will need to redesign their
products with an incline of 10 degrees
or less and meet other requirements of
this standard, remove these products
from the market, or relabel them as not
being intended for sleep by children
under 5 months of age, if appropriate.
Most play yard suppliers have already
discontinued or recalled the inclined
accessory products and replaced them
with flat products instead. The ASTM
standard for non-full-size-cribs and play
yards, F406–19, already specifies that
45 Please note that the number of companies
impacted for each product type sums to more than
the total number of impacted companies for the rule
as a whole, because several small companies sell
products in multiple product categories impacted
by this rule.
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bassinet, changing table, or similar
accessories must comply with the
applicable requirements of ASTM
standards addressing those product
types. Play yard suppliers were already
required to comply with the
requirement that bassinet accessories
meet the bassinet standard. Because the
main product is the play yard, not the
particular accessories, and suppliers
were already required to comply with
the bassinet standard for bassinet-type
accessories, this rule should not have a
significant impact on any of the
suppliers of play yards, unless they had
‘‘napper’’ or ‘‘inclined sleeper’’
accessories that did not meet the
bassinet standard. The impact could be
significant for one small domestic
company that still sells inclined play
yard accessories, and has other products
in the scope of this rule.
(b) Baby Hammocks
Suppliers of baby hammocks are
unlikely to be able to redesign their
product to meet any of the existing
CPSC infant sleep standards. An
inclined sleep angle is inherent in the
design of hammocks, which shift shape
as the infant moves. Sleeping pads in
the bottom of a hammock would still
leave the product with sides that shift
shape in use. For hammock accessory
products sold separately that attach to
the corners of a crib or play yard, there
is no standard installation that could be
tested to meet incline, gap, side heights,
or stability requirements: The incline
would depend on the size of the crib or
play yard and the weight of the infant,
and the gaps between the hammock side
and the side of the crib or play yard
would depend on the size of the crib or
play yard. Therefore, relabeling and
remarketing baby hammocks as being
not for sleep or as being intended only
for children at over 5 months of age may
be the only compliance option, other
than removing the products from the
market altogether.
Since the NPR was published, some
baby hammocks have been withdrawn
from the market by small companies
that make and import other types of
baby products or adult hammocks.
However, many home-based suppliers
remain in the market, as well as several
small domestic businesses, one of which
appears to have infant crib hammocks as
its only product. Multiple importers
based in the U.S. also sell hammocks
with frames made by foreign companies,
but those companies will not be
significantly impacted because they sell
many other products that would not be
impacted by the final rule. Several
foreign companies that make baby
hammocks will have to stop distributing
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them in the U.S., or conspicuously label
them as being for use only by children
over 5 months of age.
If baby hammocks are removed from
the market, the impact will likely be
significant for one small domestic
company for which baby hammocks
constitute most, if not all, of their
product line, as well as possibly
significant for several small importers
that do not appear to have many other
products. The impact will likely be
significant for dozens of home-based
manufacturers that have crib hammocks
or other fabric hammocks without a
frame as their main or only product, if
they choose to exit the market.
However, it is possible that some sellers
of hammocks will simply relabel and
remarket them for older children or as
toy storage hammocks. The demand for
these products for older children or toy
storage uses is unknown.
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2. Flat Sleep Products
(a) Flat, Soft-Sided Products
Many of the suppliers of flat, softsided products would likely be
significantly impacted by the final rule.
This is because compliance with any of
the sleep product standards, particularly
the stability, side height, and occupant
containment requirements, would be
difficult for a product with low, soft
sides. A product with low, soft sides
cannot meet the bassinet standard by
simply adding a stand, nor can it meet
the hand-held carrier standard by
simply adding handles. Also, adding
rigid higher sides may be contrary to the
intended product use as in-bed sleepers.
Relabeling the products as being not
intended for infant sleep might not be
an option if the product is clearly
intended for infant sleep, and is not
large enough for an older child,
although these items could be
remarketed as pet beds. At least nine
small importers and four domestic
manufacturers that supply these
products have these products as most or
all of their product line. There are also
potentially hundreds of small, homebased businesses for which such low,
soft-sided products appear to be their
major product line. The impact for
suppliers that have these products as
most of their product line would likely
be significant. In addition, the many
home-based businesses do not currently
have warning labels, instruction
manuals, or certification to other CPSC
or ASTM standards. Some products are
already being remarketed as loungers,
nappers, or ‘‘for tummy time’’, but will
be required to comply with the final
rule if they are marketed for sleep,
including napping.
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Flat play yard accessories are already
required to meet the bassinet or other
applicable standard. The ASTM
standard for non-full-size-cribs and play
yards, F406–19, already specifies that
bassinet, changing table, or similar
accessories must comply with the
applicable requirements of ASTM
standards addressing those accessories.
Most flat play yard accessories are hardframed, not soft-sided, and are
discussed in the next section. Because
the main product is the play yard, not
the particular accessories, and suppliers
were already required to comply with
the bassinet standard for bassinet-type
accessories, this rule should not have a
significant impact on any of the
suppliers of flat play yard accessories,
unless they have ‘‘napper’’ accessories
that are not compliant with the bassinet
standard. One importer has only one
model of play yard with a flat mesh
accessory as their main product; that
importer could be significantly
impacted if their product is not
compliant and they cannot find another
supplier with a compliant product.
(b) Flat, Rigid-Sided and Rigid-Framed
Compact Bassinets, Travel Bassinets,
and Similar Products
Compact bassinets with rigid sides or
rigid-framed sides but without a stand
or legs cannot meet the stability or
physical requirements of CPSC’s
bassinet and cradle standard or this
standard, independent of whether the
product has an incline. Suppliers may
choose to offer their products with a
stand to meet this standard, or add a
handle and redesign the product to meet
the hand-held carrier standard. In either
case, the cost of redesigning the product
could be significant. These products
usually already have flat sleep surface
and rigid sides, as required by the
bassinet/cradle standard, but may not
meet the side-height requirement of the
bassinet/cradle standard. However, the
cost to redesign could still be
significant, as even a simple re-design
could cost hundreds of thousands of
dollars per model and require new
third-party testing, and all of the
product marketing, instructions, and
packaging would have to be revised.
Adding a stand would also increase the
retail price of the product, which would
likely reduce sales, assuming that
demand is responsive to price and that
other products like hand-held carriers
are considered by consumers to be
reasonable substitutes. Moreover, these
products likely cannot be remarketed for
another use by infants 5 months and
younger, as the physical design suggests
the product is for sleep, although they
could be remarketed for older children
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or for pets, depending on whether the
size is appropriate for those uses. For
the importers, the impact is likely not
significant, as they do not have these
products as most of their product line
and can therefore either stop selling the
product or obtain a compliant product
from a different supplier at minimal cost
to them. For the two domestic
manufacturers of these products that
have these products as most of their
product line, or sell multiple products
covered by this rule, the cost of
compliance could be significant.
Baby boxes have similar compliance
impacts to the larger category of
compact bassinets. Some compact
bassinets are marketed as suitable for
bed-sharing, so may be considered as
rigid in-bed sleepers. Suppliers of baby
boxes and in-bed sleepers with rigid or
rigid-framed sides may also choose to
offer their products with a stand to meet
the bassinet standard. Given that these
products already have rigid sides and
flat sleeping surfaces, the redesign may
be relatively minor, but could still cost
hundreds of thousands of dollars to
implement and test, especially given the
need to adapt them to meet stability
requirements. These suppliers could
also choose to add a handle to these
products and make other design,
instructions and labeling changes in
order to comply with the hand-held
carrier standard. Labeling these
products as not for infant sleep is likely
not an option, as these items are
intended for sleep, and are too small to
be used by older children. Remarketing
as storage boxes is possible, but likely
a much lower price point. The impact
could be significant for two suppliers of
baby boxes.
Flat sleep surface play yard
accessories are already required to meet
the bassinet or other applicable
standard. The ASTM standard for nonfull-size-cribs and play yards, F406–19,
already specifies that bassinet, changing
table, or similar accessories must
comply with the applicable
requirements of ASTM standards
addressing those accessories. Because
the main product is the play yard, not
the particular accessories, and suppliers
were already required to comply with
the bassinet standard for bassinet-type
accessories, this rule should not have a
significant impact on any of the
suppliers of flat rigid-sided play yard
accessories, with the possible exception
of a few ‘‘napper’’ products from small
importers. Those importers should be
able to find a new compliant supplier
relatively easily, or relabel the items as
not for sleep.
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(c) Baby Tents
Baby tents cannot meet any of CPSC’s
sleep standards, due to the physical
form of these products, which includes
slanted flexible sides connected to the
floor, sometimes with hanging cords
and anchoring spikes. Therefore,
relabeling these products as not for
infant sleep or removing the products
from the market are the only compliance
options. We assume that most suppliers
will choose to remarket their items as
not for sleep or for older children, and
that this will not reduce sales, because
the advertised primary purpose of the
product is shade and insect screen.
Also, most suppliers in this product
sector are importers with many other
unrelated products or foreign direct
shippers. CPSC believes it unlikely most
of the suppliers in this category will
experience a significant economic
impact as a result of this rule. One small
importer does not appear to have any
other products that might be
significantly impacted if they cannot
find a compliant supplier.
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F. Summary of Costs and the Economic
Impact of the Final Rule
Suppliers that choose to stay in the
market for infant sleep products will
need to comply with the final rule, or
another CPSC sleep standard, and
certify compliance through third party
testing. Suppliers that choose to relabel
their products as bouncer seats or
swings will need to meet the standards
for those products. Suppliers that
relabel their products for use by
children over 5 months will still need
to meet general testing and certification
requirements required for all children’s
products, such as testing for lead
content and phthalates, as well as small
parts, but they were already required to
meet those requirements.
Based on costs for compliance with
other ASTM and CPSC standards for
durable nursery products, the expected
cost to comply with third party testing
will be about $1,500 per model tested,
including the costs of the samples to be
tested. This is for compliance with the
specific standard for infant sleep
products only; the costs for complying
with general requirements for children’s
products should not be new costs for
any suppliers. Some of the companies
that are small by SBA standards have up
to a dozen models of different products
impacted by this rule, each of which
will have to be tested for compliance
with this standard. This would suggest
testing costs of about $18,000 per testing
cycle.
The suppliers of low, soft-sided
products and hammocks are unlikely to
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be able to redesign their products to
meet any of the sleep standards, so they
will need to decide whether to exit the
market or relabel their products for use
by older children. The impact is likely
to be significant for suppliers of these
products if these products constitute a
substantial portion of their product line,
and they choose to exit the market
rather than remarketing the items for
older children or pets.
Some manufacturers and importers,
both large and small, may be able to
minimize the impact of this rule by
marketing their products as not for
infant sleep, thus effectively putting
their products out of scope of this rule.
This may involve conspicuously
labeling and marketing their items as
not for sleep by children under 5
months. Some flat sleep surface rigidsided products could demonstrate
compliance with this standard and the
bassinet standard with the addition of a
stand or other rigid support. Some noncompliant items might be remarketed
for pet use, which has apparently
happened with some former children’s
products, but the market for such
products is probably limited.
Remarketing these products could still
result in significant impact of suppliers
if such relabeling results in a substantial
reduction in product demand.
While some items can be credibly
remarketed as not for infant sleep, such
as items that resemble chairs or swings,
the design of other items suggest they
are intended for infant sleep, including
hammock crib accessories, baby boxes,
and in-bed sleepers, as are most
compact bassinets and anything
marketed as a ‘‘bed’’. Some of these
products could be marketed for children
over 5 months, depending on the size of
the product, but many are too small for
a larger child. Suppliers of products
where the design and function of the
product communicates to the consumer
that the product is intended for infant
sleep may experience a significant
economic impact if those products are a
substantial portion of their product line.
Most home-based manufacturers will
have the choice of either remarketing
their products as not for infant sleep or
stopping the sale of the products. The
cost of redesigning the product to
comply with the standard could be a
significant portion of revenue for homebased manufacturers, and redesign
might not even be possible for some
products commonly sold by home-based
manufacturers, such as baby hammocks
and low, soft-sided flat products.
Additionally, even if redesign were
possible, the testing costs alone could be
sufficient to induce these home-based
manufacturers to withdraw from the
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market for these products. The
economic impact of the rule on these
home-based manufacturers is likely to
be significant. In some cases, these
manufacturers might be able to relabel
their products for older children, or for
pet use. In the case of hammocks, the
items could also be marketed for toy
storage. However, the demand for infant
sleep products for these types of
alternative uses is likely to be limited.
We discussed earlier the impacts for
specific types of sleeper markets. In
summary, the suppliers of inclined
sleepers can redesign their items to meet
this standard, remove them from the
market, relabel them for use by older
children, or remarket them as some type
of chair. Some inclined items have
already been remarketed as types of
chairs or chair/swing combination
products. The impact would depend on
the demand for these products as chairs;
the current remarketing suggests that
companies have found there is indeed
demand for these products as chairs.
Suppliers of inclined play yard
accessories have similar options; it
appears that most play yard suppliers
have chosen to remove these items from
the market and replace them with flat
sleep surface accessories instead.
Because play yards were already
required to comply with the bassinet
standard if in bassinet mode, this may
not be a significant impact. Suppliers of
compact rigid-sided and rigid-framed
products without a stand may be able to
redesign their products to meet this
standard, or remarket them for use by
older children. The size of some of these
products would be appropriate for use
by older children. Some suppliers of
soft-sided ‘‘travel’’ and ‘‘compact’’
bassinets are unlikely to be able to
redesign their products to comply with
this standard, but may be able to
remarket them for use by older children.
Similarly, suppliers of in-bed sleepers
and baby hammocks are unlikely to be
able to redesign their products to
comply with this rule, but some may be
able to remarket them for use by older
children or pets, depending on the size
of the products, although demand for
those uses may be limited.
In general, suppliers of products with
limited remarketing options, where the
size of the product is not conducive to
use by older children, the low, soft sides
cannot easily be redesigned to meet this
standard, and the physical configuration
of the product limits uses other than
sleep, are likely to be significantly
impacted. Some suppliers may be able
to remarket their infant sleep products
for alternative uses. However, this
market is probably limited; otherwise,
some of these suppliers would already
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have been producing products for these
alternative uses. At least nine small
domestic companies and twelve small
importers are likely to be significantly
impacted because products in scope of
this rule represent most or a substantial
portion of their product line. Hundreds
of home-based manufacturers based in
the U.S. supply baby nests, baby pods,
in-bed sleepers, hammocks, and crib
hammocks are likely to be significantly
impacted, although some may be able to
relabel their items as not for sleep or for
older children. If the products cannot be
remarketed, many of these home-based
manufacturers may eliminate infant
sleep products from their product lines;
it also possible that a significant
proportion may go out of business.
In summary, taking all of these factors
into account, the final rule is likely to
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
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G. Other Potential Impacts of the Final
Rule
The final rule would make it illegal to
sell, offer for sale, manufacture for sale,
distribute in commerce, or import into
the United States products not
compliant with the rule 12 months after
the publication of the rule in the
Federal Register. This means that
parents and other caregivers would not
be able to purchase these items. The
large volume of these products sold or
home-made reflect that these products
all address a demand for a compact
sleep space for babies, so it is reasonable
to assume that demand will continue for
new or redesigned products that meet
one of CPSC’s sleep standards. As
discussed earlier, products that are
compliant with the current CPSC sleep
standards are already widely available,
provide compact sleep spaces, and are
in the same general price range as the
items covered by this rule.
Several public commenters suggested
that this rule would cause caregivers to
resort to less safe sleep solutions, such
as putting infants to sleep in car seats,
or using pillows to position infants on
adult beds. Caregivers may already
make home-made sleep places or misuse other types of products, and CPSC
is unaware of data to support the
assertion that this rule would further
encourage such practices. Directions for
making home-made baby nests were
widely available on the internet before
CPSC published the 2017 NPR. The
DNPES, which was done in 2014, found
that a majority of parents were using
products for sleep that are not marketed
for sleep, such as swings, bouncer seats,
and hand-held carriers at least once a
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week.46 In addition, many inclined
products have already been removed
from the market or relabeled as not for
sleep since publication of the 2017 NPR.
While some of the inclined products
may be remarketed as not for infant
sleep, the final rule will provide parents
and other caregivers clearer information
as to the manufacturer’s intended safe
use.
The effective date is a ‘‘sold by’’ date.
This means that retailers will need to
sell or otherwise dispose of their stock
by that date. Given that this rule has
been in progress for several years
through a notice and comment
rulemaking, and that many of the
inclined products have already been
withdrawn from the market, this should
not have a significant impact on small
retailers.
This rule would require all infant
sleep products not in the scope of other
CPSC sleep standards to comply with
this rule. This means that new products
would have to comply with this rule, or
one of the other sleep standards.
Suppliers may introduce new products
that comply with any of those
standards, such as an innovative
bassinet design that meets all the
requirements of the bassinet standard.
They may also work with ASTM to
revise one of the ASTM sleep standards
to cover their new product, and then
CPSC could consider such revision as
part of CPSC’s procedures for accepting
revisions to voluntary standards that are
the basis for CPSC mandatory standards.
Suppliers of innovative products may
also work with ASTM to develop a
separate, new sleep standard, then seek
to have CPSC codify the new ASTM
standard as a mandatory infant sleep
standard under section 104 of the
CPSIA.
H. Efforts to Minimize the Impact on
Small Entities (Alternatives)
CPSC has attempted to minimize the
impact of the final rule on small entities
by defining the scope of this rule to only
include infant sleep products that are:
• Not within the scope of another
standard;
• marketed or intended for infant
sleep, including napping; and
• marketed or intended for use by
children up to 5 months old.
These requirements provide small
businesses the opportunity to remove
their products from the scope of this
46 The DNPES reported that in households with
children under 6, children slept in bouncer seats at
least once a week in 70% of households that owned
a bouncer seat, slept in swings at least once a week
in 91% of households with a swing, and slept in
hand-held carriers at least once a week in 87% of
households with hand-held carriers.
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standard by marketing them as not
intended for sleep, or only intended for
use by older children, or for pets.
Companies can also redesign their
products to meet the requirements of
another standard, such as infant
bouncer seats or hand-held carriers. In
some cases where there is another use
for the product, the only change
required to make a product subject to
one of these other standards is to relabel
or remarket the product, removing any
references to its use for sleeping.
CPSC also published an SNPR in
2019, which means firms have been
aware of this rulemaking effort and have
had several years to prepare for
implementation of the final rule. Many
companies that had inclined products
that were in the scope of the 2017 NPR
have removed those products from the
market since 2019, or remarketed them
as loungers, bouncer seats, or other
products not for sleep.
While the Commission has exempted
small batch manufacturers from the
testing requirements proposed under
other rules, under Section 14(d)(4)(C)(ii)
of the CPSA, the Commission cannot
‘‘provide any alternative requirements
or exemption’’ from third party testing
for ‘‘durable infant or toddler products,’’
as defined in section 104(f) of the
CPSIA. Consequently, staff cannot
recommend a small batch exemption for
small baby nest and hammock homebased manufacturers absent a statutory
change.
The ASTM F3118 committee
considered wording that would allow
manufacturers to choose whether to
comply with F3118 or another ASTM
sleep standard, to allow innovative
products to enter the market more
easily. This final rule requires suppliers
to comply with this rule or one of CPSC
mandatory standards for full-size cribs,
non-full-size cribs, bassinets and
cradles, play yards, or bedside sleepers.
The approach considered by ASTM to
allow suppliers to choose other ASTM
sleep product standards would allow
suppliers to sell products that did not
meet an existing CPSC sleep standard,
such as a drop side crib, so long as that
product had a sleep surface incline of
less than 10 degrees and otherwise
complied with ASTM F3118. Staff did
not recommend this approach, which
would effectively allow potentially
unsafe, non-compliant sleep products to
re-enter the market.
Finally, the IRFA discussed allowing
a later effective date. A later effective
date would reduce the economic impact
on firms in two ways. Firms would be
less likely to experience a lapse in
production/importation, which could
result if they are unable to comply and
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third-party test within the required
timeframe. Also, firms could spread
costs over a longer time period, thereby
reducing their annual costs, as well as
the present value of their total costs.
CPSC received comments both
supporting and opposing a later
effective date. Given that many of the
products have already been removed
from the market or otherwise
remarketed to be out of scope of this
rule, reducing the impact on domestic
small businesses, and that companies
already had notice that this final rule
was in progress since November 2019,
the Commission will maintain a 12month effective date, as proposed in the
2019 SNPR.
XIV. Environmental Considerations
The Commission’s regulations address
whether the agency is required to
prepare an environmental assessment or
an environmental impact statement.
Under these regulations, certain
categories of CPSC actions normally
have ‘‘little or no potential for affecting
the human environment,’’ and therefore,
they do not require an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact
statement. Safety standards providing
requirements for products come under
this categorical exclusion. 16 CFR
1021.5(c)(1). The final rule for infant
sleep products falls within the
categorical exemption.
XV. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule contains information
collection requirements that are subject
to public comment and review by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA; 44 U.S.C. 3501–3521).
Under 44 U.S.C. 3507(a)(1)(D), an
agency must publish the following
information:
• A title for the collection of
information;
• a summary of the collection of
information;
• a brief description of the need for
the information and the proposed use of
the information;
• a description of the likely
respondents and proposed frequency of
response to the collection of
information;
• an estimate of the burden that shall
result from the collection of
information; and
• notice that comments may be
submitted to the OMB.
The preamble to the 2019 SNPR (84
FR 60959–61) discussed the information
collection burden of the supplemental
proposed rule and specifically requested
comments on the accuracy of our
estimates. The OMB assigned control
number 3041–0177 for this information
collection. We did not receive any
comment regarding the information
collection burden of the proposal in the
2019 SNPR. For the final rule, CPSC
adjusts the number of small home-based
manufacturers from 6 to 1,200, and the
number of other suppliers from 13 to
125. In accordance with PRA
requirements, the Commission provides
the following information:
Title: Safety Standard for Infant Sleep
Products.
Description: The final rule defines an
‘‘infant sleep product’’ as a product
marketed or intended to provide a
sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months of age, and that is not
already subject to one of the mandatory
CPSC sleep standards: Full-size cribs,
33069
non-full-size cribs, play yards, bassinets,
cradles, or bed-side sleepers. The infant
sleep products covered by this rule
include inclined and flat sleep products,
such as inclined sleepers, play yard
infant sleep accessories, baby nests and
pods, in-bed sleepers, baby hammocks,
compact or travel bassinets without a
stand or legs, and baby tents. This final
rule for infant sleep products
incorporates by reference the voluntary
standard for infant inclined sleep
products issued by ASTM International,
ASTM F3118–17a, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Infant Inclined
Sleep Products, with modifications to
further reduce the risk of injury
associated with infant sleep products.
The final rule sets a safety floor for all
infant sleep products sold in the United
States, by requiring infant sleep
products to have a seat back/sleep
surface angle of 10 degrees or less from
horizontal, and to meet the
requirements of 16 CFR part 1218,
Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, including conforming to the
definition of a bassinet/cradle. Part 1218
incorporates by reference the
performance and labeling requirements
of ASTM F2194–16e1. Sections 8 and 9
of ASTM F2194–16e1 contain
requirements for marking, labeling, and
instructional literature. These
requirements fall within the definition
of ‘‘collection of information,’’ as
defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(3).
Description of Respondents: Persons
who manufacture or import infant sleep
products.
Estimated Burden: We estimate the
burden of this collection of information
as follows:
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TABLE 6—ESTIMATED ANNUAL REPORTING BURDEN
Number of
respondents
Frequency of
responses
Total annual
responses
Hours per
response
Total burden
hours
Burden type
Type of supplier
Labeling ...............................
Home-based manufacturers
Other Suppliers ..................
1,200
125
1
2
1,200
250
7
1
8,400
250
Labeling Total ..............
Instructional literature ..........
.............................................
Home-based manufacturers
........................
1,200
........................
1
........................
1,200
........................
50
8,650
60,000
Total burden .................
.............................................
........................
........................
........................
........................
68,650
Two groups of quantifiable entities
supply infant sleep products to the U.S.
market that will likely need to make
some modifications to their existing
warning labels to meet the requirements
for warnings. The first group consists of
very small home-based manufacturers,
which may not currently have warning
labels on their infant sleep products.
Similar rulemakings (such as that for
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sling carriers) assumed that it would
take home-based manufacturers
approximately 15 hours to develop a
new label. Given that some home-based
manufacturers supply infant sleep
products with warning labels already,
we have estimated approximately 7
hours per response for this group of
suppliers. Therefore, the total burden
hours for very small home-based
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manufacturers is 7 hours per model ×
1,200 entities × 1 models per entity =
8,400 hours.
The second group of quantifiable
entities supplying infant sleep products
to the U.S. market that will need to
make some modifications to their
existing warning labels are non-homebased manufacturers and importers.
These firms do not operate at the low
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production volume of the home-based
firms. All of the firms in this second
group have existing warning labels on
their products, but not necessarily labels
that are compliant with the
requirements of ASTM F2194, as
specified in 16 CFR part 1218, and
would therefore, have to make label
modifications. Given that these firms are
used to working with warning labels, we
estimate that the time required to make
any modifications now or in the future
would be about 1 hour per model. Based
on an evaluation of supplier product
lines, each entity supplies an average of
2 models of infant sleep products;
therefore, the estimated burden
associated with labels for this second
group is 1 hours per model × 125
entities × 2 models per entity = 250
hours.
The total burden hours attributable to
warning labels is the sum of the burden
hours for both entity groups: Very small
home-based manufacturers (8,400
burden hours) + non-home-based
manufacturers and importers (250
burden hours) = 8,650 burden hours. We
estimate the hourly compensation for
the time required to create and update
labels is $33.71 (U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics, ‘‘Employer Costs for
Employee Compensation,’’ December
2020, Supplementary table 1, total
compensation for all sales and office
workers in goods-producing private
industries: https://www.bls.gov/web/
ecec/ecsuptc.pdf. Therefore, the
estimated annual cost to industry
associated with the labeling
requirements is $291,591.50 ($33.71 per
hour × 8,650 hours = $291,591.50). No
operating, maintenance, or capital costs
are associated with the collection.
ASTM F2194 (section 9) requires
instructions to be supplied with the
product. As already noted, the proposed
Safety Standard for Infant Sleep
Products requires infant sleep products
to meet these requirements. Under the
OMB’s regulations (5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2)),
the time, effort, and financial resources
necessary to comply with a collection of
information that would be incurred by
persons in the ‘‘normal course of their
activities’’ are excluded from a burden
estimate, where an agency demonstrates
that the disclosure activities required to
comply are ‘‘usual and customary.’’
We are unaware of infant sleep
products that generally require use
instructions but lack such instructions.
However, it is possible that the 1,200
home-based manufacturers of infant
hammocks, baby nests, and in-bed
sleepers may not supply instruction
manuals as part of their ‘‘normal course
of activities.’’ Based on information
collected for the infant slings
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rulemaking, staff tentatively estimates
that each small entity supplying
homemade infant hammocks, baby
nests, or in-bed sleepers might require
50 hours to develop an instruction
manual to accompany their products.
These firms typically supply only one
infant sleep product model. Therefore,
the costs of designing an instruction
manual for these firms could be as high
as $2,022,600 (50 hours per model × 1
model per entity × 1,200 entities =
$2,022,600). However, this cost estimate
may overestimate the annual cost to
industry because many home-based
firms might not pay average U.S.
domestic wage rates. Not all firms
would incur these costs every year, but
new firms that enter the market would
incur these costs, and this is a highly
fluctuating market. Other firms are
estimated to have no burden hours
associated with instruction manuals
because any burden associated with
supplying instructions with infant sleep
products would be ‘‘usual and
customary’’ and not within the
definition of ‘‘burden’’ under the OMB’s
regulations.
Based on this analysis, CPSC staff
estimates that the final rule for infant
sleep products would impose a burden
to industry of 68,650 hours at a cost of
$2,314,191.50 annually. In compliance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)), we have
submitted the information collection
requirements of this final rule to the
OMB.
XVII. Congressional Review Act
XVI. Preemption
Administrative practice and
procedure, Audit, Consumer protection,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Third party conformity
assessment body.
Section 26(a) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C.
2075(a), provides that when a consumer
product safety standard is in effect and
applies to a product, no state or political
subdivision of a state may either
establish or continue in effect a standard
or regulation that prescribes
requirements for the performance,
composition, contents, design, finish,
construction, packaging, or labeling of
such product dealing with the same risk
of injury unless the state requirement is
identical to the federal standard. Section
26(c) of the CPSA also provides that
states or political subdivisions of states
may apply to the Commission for an
exemption from this preemption under
certain circumstances. Section 104(b) of
the CPSIA deems rules issued under
that provision ‘‘consumer product safety
standards.’’ Therefore, once this final
rule for infant sleep products issued
under section 104 of the CPSIA takes
effect, the rule will preempt in
accordance with section 26(a) of the
CPSA.
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The Congressional Review Act (CRA;
5 U.S.C. 801–808) states that, before a
rule may take effect, the agency issuing
the rule must submit the rule, and
certain related information, to each
House of Congress and the Comptroller
General. 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1). The
submission must indicate whether the
rule is a ‘‘major rule.’’ The CRA states
that the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs (‘‘OIRA’’) determines
whether a rule qualifies as a ‘‘major
rule.’’ Pursuant to the CRA, OIRA
designated this rule as not a ‘‘major
rule,’’ as defined in 5 U.S.C. § 804(2). A
‘‘major rule’’ is one that the
Administrator of OIRA finds has
resulted in, or is likely to result in: (A)
An annual effect on the economy of
$100,000,000 or more; (B) a major
increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries,
Federal, State, or local government
agencies, or geographic regions; or (C) a
significant adverse effects on
competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or on the
ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreignbased enterprises in domestic and
export markets. 5 U.S.C. 804(2). To
comply with the CRA, CPSC will submit
the required information to each House
of Congress and the Comptroller
General.
List of Subjects
16 CFR Part 1112
16 CFR Part 1130
Administrative practice and
procedure, Business and industry,
Consumer protection, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
16 CFR Part 1236
Consumer protection, Imports,
Incorporation by reference, Infants and
children, Labeling, Law enforcement,
and Toys.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Commission amends Title
16 of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 1112—REQUIREMENTS
PERTAINING TO THIRD PARTY
CONFORMITY ASSESSMENT BODIES
1. The authority citation for part 1112
continues to read as follows:
■
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Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063; Pub. L. 110–
314, section 3, 122 Stat. 3016, 3017 (2008).
2. Amend § 1112.15 by adding
paragraph (b)(46) to read as follows:
■
§ 1112.15 When can a third party
conformity assessment body apply for
CPSC acceptance for a particular CPSC rule
and/or test method?
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(46) 16 CFR part 1236, Safety
Standard for Infant Sleep Products.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. The authority citation for part 1130
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2056a, 2056(b).
4. Amend § 1130.2 by revising
paragraph (a)(12) to read as follows:
■
PART 1130—REQUIREMENTS FOR
CONSUMER REGISTRATION OF
DURABLE INFANT OR TODDLER
PRODUCTS
§ 1130.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(12) Bassinets and cradles, including
bedside sleepers and infant sleep
products;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Add part 1236 to read as follows:
PART 1236—SAFETY STANDARD FOR
INFANT SLEEP PRODUCTS
Sec.
1236.1 Scope.
1236.2 Requirements for infant sleep
products.
Authority: Sec. 104, Pub. L. 110–314, 122
Stat. 3016 (15 U.S.C. 2056a); Sec. 3, Pub. L.
112–28, 125 Stat. 273.
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§ 1236.1
Scope.
This part establishes a consumer
product safety standard for infant sleep
products, including inclined and flat
sleep surfaces, that applies to all
products marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
are not already subject to any of the
following standards:
(a) 16 CFR part 1218 Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles;
(b) 16 CFR part 1219 Safety Standard
for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(c) 16 CFR part 1220 Safety Standard
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(d) 16 CFR part 1221 Safety Standard
for Play Yards;
(e) 16 CFR part 1222 Safety Standard
for Bedside Sleepers.
§ 1236.2 Requirements for infant sleep
products.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, each infant sleep
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product must comply with ASTM
F3118–17a, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Infant Inclined Sleep
Products (approved on September 1,
2017). The Director of the Federal
Register approves this incorporation by
reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. You may
obtain a copy from ASTM International,
100 Barr Harbor Drive, P.O. Box C700,
West Conshohocken, PA 19428–2959;
phone: (610) 832–9585; www.astm.org.
A read-only copy of the standard is
available for viewing on the ASTM
website at https://www.astm.org/
READINGLIBRARY/. You may inspect a
copy at the Division of the Secretariat,
U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, Room 820, 4330 East-West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814,
telephone (301) 504–7479, email: cpscos@cpsc.gov, or at the National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA).
For information on the availability of
this material at NARA, email
fedreg.legal@nara.gov, or go to:
www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/
ibr-locations.html.
(b) Comply with ASTM F3118–17a
with the following additions or
exclusions:
(1) Instead of complying with
Introduction of ASTM F3118–17a,
comply with the following:
(i) Introduction. This consumer safety
specification addresses incidents
associated with infant sleep products
identified by the U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC).
(A) In response to incident data
compiled by CPSC, this consumer safety
specification attempts to minimize the
following:
(1) Fall hazards,
(2) Asphyxiation and suffocation, and
(3) Obstruction of nose and mouth by
bedding.
(B) The purpose of the standard is to
address infant sleep products not
already covered by traditional sleep
product standards and to reduce deaths
associated with known infant sleep
hazards, including, but not limited to, a
seat back or sleep surface angle that is
greater than 10 degrees from the
horizontal.
(C) This consumer safety specification
is written within the current state-ofthe-art of infant sleep product
technology and will be updated
whenever substantive information
becomes available that necessitates
additional requirements or justifies the
revision of existing requirements.
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) In section 1.1 of ASTM F3118–17a,
replace the term ‘‘infant inclined sleep
products’’ with ‘‘infant sleep products.’’
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33071
(3) In section 1.2 of ASTM F3118–17a,
replace the term ‘‘infant inclined sleep
products’’ with ‘‘infant sleep products.’’
(4) Instead of complying with section
1.3 of ASTM F3118–17a, comply with
the following:
(i) 1.3 This consumer safety
performance specification covers infant
sleep products, including inclined and
flat sleep surfaces, marketed or intended
to provide a sleeping accommodation
for an infant up to 5 months old, and
that are not already subject to any of the
following standards:
(A) 16 CFR part 1218—Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
incorporating by reference ASTM
F2194, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bassinets and Cradles;
(B) 16 CFR part 1219—Safety
Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs,
incorporating by reference ASTM
F1169, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(C) 16 CFR part 1220—Safety
Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs,
incorporating by reference applicable
requirements in ASTM F406, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for NonFull-Size Baby Cribs/Play Yards;
(D) 16 CFR part 1221—Safety
Standard for Play Yards, incorporating
by reference applicable requirements in
ASTM F406, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby
Cribs/Play Yards;
(E) 16 CFR part 1222—Safety
Standard for Bedside Sleepers,
incorporating by reference ASTM
F2906, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bedside Sleepers.
(ii) 1.3.1 If the infant sleep product
can be converted into a product for
which a CPSC regulation exists, the
product shall meet the applicable
requirements of the CPSC regulation,
when in that use mode. If the infant
sleep product can be converted into a
product for which no CPSC regulation
exists, but another ASTM consumer
safety specification exists, the product
shall meet the applicable requirements
of the ASTM consumer safety
specification, when in that use mode.
(iii) 1.3.2 Crib mattresses that meet
the requirements of ASTM F2933 are
not covered by the specifications of this
standard.
(5) In section 1.4 of ASTM F3118–17a,
replace the term ‘‘infant inclined sleep
product’’ with ‘‘infant sleep product.’’
(6) Instead of complying with section
2.1 of ASTM F3118–17a, comply with
the following:
(i) F406 Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby
Cribs/Play Yards;
(ii) F1169 Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
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(iii) F2194 Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bassinets and Cradles;
(iv) F2906 Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bedside Sleepers;
(v) F2933 Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Crib Mattresses.
(7) Instead of complying with section
2.2 of ASTM F3118–17a, comply with
the following:
(i) 16 CFR 1218—Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles;
(ii) 16 CFR 1219—Safety Standard for
Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(iii) 16 CFR 1220—Safety Standard for
Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(iv) 16 CFR 1221—Safety Standard for
Play Yards;
(v) 16 CFR 1222—Safety Standard for
Bedside Sleepers.
(8) Do not comply with sections 2.3
and 2.4 of ASTM F3118–17a, including
Figures 1 and 2.
(9) Do not comply with sections 3.1.1
through 3.1.6 of ASTM F3118–17a.
(10) Instead of complying with section
3.1.7 of ASTM F3118–17a, comply with
the following:
(i) 3.1.7 infant sleep product, n—a
product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
is not subject to any of the following:
(A) 16 CFR part 1218—Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles;
(B) 16 CFR part 1219—Safety
Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
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(C) 16 CFR part 1220—Safety
Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(D) 16 CFR part 1221– Safety
Standard for Play Yards;
(E) 16 CFR part 1222—Safety
Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
(ii) [Reserved]
(11) Do not comply with sections
3.1.7.1 through 3.1.13 of ASTM F3118–
17a.
(12) Do not comply with section
3.1.15 through 3.1.16 of ASTM F3118–
17a.
(13) Do not comply with section 5 of
ASTM F3118–17a.
(14) Do not comply with sections 6.1
through 6.8 of ASTM F3118–17a.
(15) Instead of complying with section
6.9 of ASTM F3118–17a, comply with
the following:
(i) 6.9 Maximum Seat Back/Sleep
Surface Angle:
(ii) 6.9.1 Infant Sleep Product—The
angle of the seat back/sleep surface
intended for sleep along the occupant’s
head to toe axis relative to the
horizontal shall not exceed 10 degrees
when tested in accordance with 7.11.2.
(iii) Do not comply with 6.9.2.
(iv) 6.9.3 Infant Sleep Products—shall
meet, 16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard
for Bassinets and Cradles, including
conforming to the definition of a
‘‘bassinet/cradle.’’
(16) Do not comply with sections 6.10
through 7.10 of ASTM F3118–17a.
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(17) Do not comply with section
7.11.1.3 of ASTM F3118–17a.
(18) In section 7.11.2 of ASTM
F3118–17a, replace ‘‘Infant Inclined
Sleep Product and Infant Inclined Sleep
Product Accessory’’ with ‘‘Infant Sleep
Products.’’
(19) Instead of complying with section
7.11.2.1 and 7.11.2.2 of ASTM F3118–
17a, comply with the following:
(i) 7.11.2.1 If applicable, place the
product in the manufacturer’s
recommended highest seat back/sleep
surface angle position intended for
sleep.
(ii) 7.11.2.2 Place the hinged weight
gage–infant in the product and position
the gage with the hinge centered over
the seat bight line and the upper plate
of the gage on the seat back/sleep
surface. Place a digital protractor on the
upper torso/head area lengthwise.
(20) Do not comply with sections
7.11.3 through 9, or the Appendix, of
ASTM F3118–17a.
(21) Add section 10.2 to ASTM
F3118–17a:
(i) 10.2 infant sleep product
(ii) [Reserved]
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2021–12723 Filed 6–22–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 118 (Wednesday, June 23, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 33022-33072]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-12723]
[[Page 33021]]
Vol. 86
Wednesday,
No. 118
June 23, 2021
Part II
Consumer Product Safety Commission
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16 CFR Parts 1112, 1130, and 1236
Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 86 , No. 118 / Wednesday, June 23, 2021 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 33022]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
16 CFR Parts 1112, 1130, and 1236
[CPSC Docket No. 2017-0020]
Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of
2008 (CPSIA), the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is
issuing this final rule establishing a safety standard for infant sleep
products, which are products marketed or intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age, and that are not
subject to any of CPSC's mandatory standards for infant sleep. CPSC is
also finalizing an amendment to its regulations regarding third party
conformity assessment bodies, to include the safety standard for infant
sleep products in the list of notices of requirements (NORs) and an
amendment to the consumer registration rule, to identify infant sleep
products as a durable infant or toddler product subject to consumer
registration requirements, as a subcategory of bassinets and cradles.
DATES: This rule is effective June 23, 2022. The incorporation by
reference of the publication listed in this rule is approved by the
Director of the Federal Register as of June 23, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Keysha Walker, Compliance Officer,
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330 East-West Highway,
Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone: 301-504-6820; email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory Authority and Background
A. Statutory Authority
Section 104(b) of the CPSIA, 15 U.S.C. 2056a(b), requires the
Commission to: (1) Consult with representatives of consumer groups,
juvenile product manufacturers, and independent child product engineers
and experts, to examine and assess the effectiveness of any voluntary
consumer product safety standards for durable infant or toddler
products (15 U.S.C. 2056a(b)(1)(A)); and (2) promulgate, in accordance
with 5 U.S.C. 553, consumer product safety standards that are
substantially the same as such voluntary standards, or are more
stringent than such voluntary standards if the Commission determines
that more stringent standards would further reduce the risk of injury
associated with such products. 15 U.S.C. 2056a(b)(1)(B). Additionally,
section 104(b)(2) of the CPSIA directs the Commission to periodically
review and revise the standards set forth under this subsection, to
ensure that such standards provide the highest level of safety for such
products that is feasible.
Section 104(d) of the CPSIA requires manufacturers of durable
infant or toddler products to establish consumer registration card
programs that comply with CPSC's implementing rule, 16 CFR part 1130.
Additionally, under section 14 of the CPSA, children's products (such
as durable infant or toddler products) must comply with testing and
certification requirements that CPSC implemented through 16 CFR parts
1107, 1109, and 1110. Section 104(f)(1) of the CPSIA states that a
``durable infant or toddler product'' is a ``durable product intended
for use, or that may be reasonably expected to be used, by children
under the age of 5 years.'' Id. 2056a(f)(1). Section 104(f)(2) of the
CPSIA provides a non-exhaustive list of categories of products that are
durable infant or toddler products, such as cribs, toddler beds, and
bassinets and cradles. Id. 2056a(f)(2). The Commission's consumer
registration rule at 16 CFR 1130.2(a) defines a ``durable infant or
toddler product'' as:
DEFINITION OF DURABLE INFANT OR TODDLER PRODUCT means the
following products intended for use, or that may be reasonably
expected to be used, by children under the age of 5 years. The
listed product categories are further defined in the applicable
standards that the Commission issues under section 104(b) of the
Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, and include
products that are combinations of [17 listed] product categories. .
. .
B. Infant Sleep Products Are Durable Infant or Toddler Products
This rule establishes a category of products called ``infant sleep
products,'' which are all products marketed or intended to provide a
sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age, and that
are not already subject to a mandatory CPSC sleep standard. The product
category ``infant sleep products'' is not included in the statutory
list of products in section 104(f)(2) of the CPSIA. However, similar
sleep products, such as bassinets and cradles, and cribs, are listed in
the statute; and the Commission has the authority to add product
categories to the statutory list. The Commission adds product
categories to the list of ``durable infant or toddler products''
through a rulemaking to amend 16 CFR 1130.2, the Commission's rule
requiring durable infant or toddler products to meet consumer
registration rule requirements. All durable infant or toddler products
identified in Sec. 1130.2 must meet the product registration card
requirement; and because rules issued under section 104 of the CPSIA
are children's product safety rules, these products must also meet the
third-party testing and certification requirements in section 14 of the
CPSA, and implemented by the Commission in 16 CFR parts 1107, 1109, and
1110.
CPSC issued a notice of proposed rulemaking in 2017 (the 2017 NPR),
proposing to categorize infant inclined sleep products as a ``durable
infant or toddler product'' under section 104 of the CPSIA, as a subset
of the bassinet and cradle category. 82 FR 16963, 16969-70 (Apr. 7,
2017). In 2019, CPSC issued a supplemental notice of proposed
rulemaking (the 2019 SNPR), proposing to identify an ``infant sleep
product,'' a broader category of infant sleep, as a durable infant or
toddler product under section 104(f) of the CPSIA, also as a
subcategory of bassinets and cradles. 84 FR 60949, 60957 (Nov. 12,
2019). The 2019 SNPR proposed to remove the term ``inclined'' from the
proposed mandatory standard, which included removing the term
``inclined'' from the title, scope, introduction, and definitions of
ASTM F3118-17a, and to include within the rule, instead: ``any infant
sleep product not currently covered by another mandatory rule for
infant sleep products: Bassinets/cradles, cribs (full-size and non-
full-size), play yards, and bedside sleepers.'' 84 FR at 60951.
Accordingly, the 2019 SNPR proposed that the scope of the rule include
two types of sleep products that are currently unregulated by CPSC
under any mandatory standard, including inclined sleep products,
meaning infant sleep products with a sleep surface angle greater than
10 degrees from horizontal, and flat (non-inclined) sleep products,
meaning infant sleep products with a sleep surface angle equal to or
less than 10 degrees.
For this final rule, CPSC will finalize the definition of an
``infant sleep product'' as a durable infant or toddler product, a
category of products that is a subset of the bassinet and cradle
standard, consistent with the 2019 SNPR. The final rule defines an
``infant sleep product'' as ``a product marketed or intended to provide
a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age,'' and
that is not already subject to one of CPSC's mandatory standards for
infant sleep:
[[Page 33023]]
16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards, or
16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
As defined in the final rule, an ``infant sleep product'' meets the
definition of a ``durable infant or toddler product'' because the
products are intended for infants up to 5 months old, and the products
are ``intended for use,'' and ``reasonably expected to be used,'' by
children under 5 years old. Moreover, products marketed or intended as
a sleeping accommodation for an infant are similar to the products for
infant sleep that are already included in the statutory list of durable
infant or toddler products, such as cribs and bassinets and cradles. We
also note that ``infant sleep products'' are further defined in the
final rule, as provided in part 1130. Accordingly, adding ``infant
sleep products'' as a durable infant or toddler product is consistent
with the Commission's approach of adding a durable infant or toddler
product category that has a mandatory standard to the list of products
in part 1130, to clarify that these products must meet the consumer
registration rule, and the third-party testing and certification
requirements for children's product safety rules.
C. Consultation Regarding the Effectiveness of the Voluntary Standard
To meet the first requirement in section 104(b) of the CPSIA that
the Commission consult with representatives of consumer groups,
juvenile product manufacturers, and independent child product engineers
and experts to examine and assess the effectiveness of the relevant
voluntary standards, CPSC staff regularly participates in the juvenile
products subcommittee meetings of ASTM International (ASTM). Staff's
participation in ASTM's voluntary standards process includes providing
anonymized incident data, participating in meetings to assess the
ability of a voluntary standard to address the incident data, and
working through the ASTM process to develop performance and labeling
requirements to address identified hazards. Staff also comments or
votes on certain ASTM ballots to revise voluntary standards. ASTM
subcommittees consist of members who represent producers, users,
consumers, government, and academia.\1\
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\1\ ASTM International website: www.astm.org, ``About ASTM
International.''
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In 2011, ASTM began work on a new standard for infant inclined
sleep products. Development of this new ASTM standard for infant
inclined sleep products, F3118, arose from efforts to update the
voluntary standard for bassinets and cradles. Accordingly, staff's
consultation process for the inclined sleep product rulemaking
commenced in approximately 2011, when ASTM, with CPSC's concurrence,
decided to separate hammocks and other inclined sleep products from the
development of the bassinet standard, ASTM F2194, to develop a new
voluntary standard that would specifically address the characteristics
of inclined sleep products. For example, the bassinet standard requires
a sleep surface angle of 10 degrees or less, and inclined products have
a sleep angle greater than 10 degrees. Since then, staff has been
actively participating in developing the voluntary standard for infant
inclined sleep products.
In addition to working on ASTM's inclined sleep standard, staff
also has been working with the ASTM subcommittee developing the
bassinet standard since before 2011, and to this day, continues to
provide incident data and participate in task group and subcommittee
meetings, including meetings and ASTM ballots involving the currently
unregulated flat sleep products within the scope of this final rule.
Sections V.A.3 and V.B.2 of this preamble contain additional
information about CPSC staff's work on the products within the scope of
the final rule, both inclined and flat sleep products, through the ASTM
standards development process for the bassinet and cradle standard, the
infant inclined sleep standard, and a new, unpublished standard for in-
bed sleepers.
D. 2017 NPR and 2019 Termination Notice
When staff began working on the mandatory standard for bassinets
and cradles, and participating with the ASTM standards development
subcommittee, staff considered whether infant hammocks and other
inclined sleep products should fall within the scope of the bassinet
and cradle standard. Because the bassinets and cradles voluntary
standard did not address products on the market that had a sleep
incline greater than 10 degrees, the Commission directed staff to
initiate a separate rulemaking effort for infant hammocks and other
inclined sleep products, to address the characteristics of inclined
products. Accordingly, the infant inclined sleep products safety
standard was an outgrowth of the bassinet and cradle standard, intended
to address products with an incline greater than 10 degrees from
horizontal.
In approximately 2011, at the time CPSC separated infant inclined
sleep products from the bassinets and cradles standard, ASTM
simultaneously began work on developing a voluntary standard for infant
inclined sleep products. ASTM published the resulting infant inclined
sleep products standard in May 2015, and updated the standard twice in
2016, and twice in 2017. ASTM's latest standard for this product
category is designated, ASTM F3118-17a, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Infant Inclined Sleep Products (ASTM F3118-17a).
CPSC's 2017 NPR proposed a mandatory standard for infant inclined
sleep products, incorporating by reference the then-current voluntary
standard, ASTM F3118-17, with a modification to the standard's
definition of ``accessory.'' 82 FR 16964 (April 7, 2017). The 2017 NPR
for infant inclined sleep products, which included hammocks, discussed
14 fatal incidents related to infant inclined sleep products, which
were reported to have occurred between January 1, 2005 and September
30, 2016. The 2017 NPR indicated that ASTM F3118-17 addressed the
primary hazard patterns CPSC identified in the 657 incidents (including
14 deaths), except for the definition of ``accessory,'' which was
defined too narrowly to address potential hazards. Specifically, the
2017 NPR proposed that CPSC's standard would not include the term
``rigid frame'' in the definition of ``accessory inclined sleep
product'' in section 3.1.1 of ASTM F3118-17, broadening the definition
to encompass a new product that did not have a rigid frame. Id. at
16968-69, and 16975. The Commission concluded that for the mandatory
standard, more stringent requirements were necessary to further reduce
the risk of injury associated with infant inclined sleep products
relating to the use of an inclined sleep product accessory. Id. at
16967.
As the 2017 NPR explained, durable infant or toddler products are
children's products that must be certified as complying with all
applicable CPSC-enforced requirements. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a); 82 FR at
16969. Certification must be based on testing conducted by a CPSC-
accepted third party conformity assessment body (test laboratory). 15
U.S.C. 2063(a)(2). CPSC must publish an
[[Page 33024]]
NOR for the accreditation of test laboratories to assess a product's
conformity with a children's product safety rule. The 2017 NPR proposed
that if issued as a final rule, the new Safety Standard for Infant
Inclined Sleep Products, to be codified at 16 CFR part 1236, would be
added to the list of NORs for children's product safety rules in 16 CFR
part 1112, so that test laboratories applying for CPSC acceptance could
seek accreditation to test inclined sleep products. 82 FR at 16969. The
2017 NPR also proposed to amend 16 CFR part 1130, the Commission's
requirements for consumer registration for durable infant or toddler
products, to amend the definition of ``durable infant or toddler
product'' to clarify that infant inclined sleep products fall within
the term, and are subject to the consumer registration card
requirements. Id. at 16969-70.
On June 12, 2019, CPSC staff submitted a briefing package and a
draft Federal Register notice to the Commission, recommending that the
Commission terminate the 2017 NPR. Staff recommended terminating the
2017 NPR because, since issuing the 2017 NPR, CPSC had received reports
of 42 additional fatalities associated with rocker-like inclined sleep
products, and because the Commission had issued additional safety
alerts and recalls involving infant inclined sleep products. To date,
the Commission has not voted on the notice to terminate the 2017 NPR.
E. 2019 SNPR
On October 16, 2019, staff provided the Commission with a briefing
package recommending that instead of terminating the 2017 NPR, the
Commission issue an SNPR. During the development of Staff's 2019 SNPR
Briefing Package, staff received reports of 451 new incidents; 59 were
deaths that occurred in infant inclined sleep products. Commission
staff contracted with Dr. Erin Mannen, Ph.D., a mechanical engineer
with a biomechanics specialization, to conduct infant testing to
evaluate the design of inclined sleep products. Tab B of the Staff's
2019 SNPR Briefing Package contains Dr. Mannen's study, Biomechanical
Analysis of Inclined Sleep (Mannen Study).\2\
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\2\ The October 16, 2019, Staff Briefing Package: Draft
Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for Infant Sleep Products
under the Danny Keysar Child Product Safety Notification Act
(Staff's SNPR Briefing Package) is available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/SupplementalNoticeofProposedRulemakingforInfantSleepProducts_10_16_2019.pdf?TPVAJZEQcz9x9sKeEGltm4LskkonxUWv.
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The Commission published an SNPR on November 12, 2019. 84 FR 60949.
The 2019 SNPR proposed to issue a standard for ``infant sleep
products,'' meaning products that (1) provide sleeping accommodations
for infants and (2) are not currently subject to a CPSC mandatory
standard for infant sleep: Bassinets/cradles, cribs (full-size and non-
full size), play yards, and bedside sleepers (collectively, CPSC sleep
standards). The 2019 SNPR proposed to incorporate by reference ASTM F
3118-17a, with modifications to require that for each infant sleep
product: (1) The seat back angle intended for sleep must be equal to or
less than 10 degrees from horizontal, and (2) must meet the
requirements for a bassinet and cradle in the standard at 16 CFR part
1218. 84 FR at 60956. The Commission also proposed to amend the
consumer registration rule to identify ``infant sleep products'' as a
category of durable infant or toddler products under section 104(f) of
the CPSIA, and proposed to amend the regulation at 16 CFR part 1112, to
add infant sleep products to the list of products that require third-
party testing. Id. at 60957.
F. Overview of the Final Rule
For the final rule, the Commission is finalizing the requirements
largely as proposed in the 2019 SNPR. The final rule incorporates by
reference the voluntary standard, ASTM F3118-17a, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Infant Inclined Sleep Products, with
modifications to the introduction, scope, performance, and testing
requirements, to further reduce the risk of injury associated with
infant sleep products, both flat and inclined. The final rule requires
that ``infant sleep products,'' defined as products marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not covered by a CPSC sleep standard, be
tested to confirm the seat back/sleep surface angle is 10 degrees or
less from horizontal, and meet the requirements of 16 CFR part 1218,
Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, including conforming to the
definition of a ``bassinet/cradle.'' The scope of the final rule is
also consistent with this definition of an ``infant sleep product.''
The final rule specifies CPSC's sleep standards as:
16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards, or
16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
Products intended for sleep that already conform to a CPSC sleep
standard in this list are not within the scope of the final rule.
The scope of the final rule, and the definition of ``infant sleep
product,'' are purposely broader than the scope of the bassinet and
cradle standard, and the definition of a ``bassinet/cradle,'' to
capture within the scope of the final rule all products marketed for
infant sleep for infants up to 5 months old that are not covered by a
CPSC sleep standard; those that are currently on the market, and any
future products developed for this age group. CPSC's intent is to set a
baseline of safety for infant sleep products so that all of these
products must, at a minimum, meet the performance and labeling
requirements in 16 CFR part 1218, including conforming to the
definition of a ``bassinet/cradle,'' and being tested and certified as
meeting these requirements.
Based on the Commission's review of inclined and flat sleep product
incident data, and consideration of the comments on the 2017 NPR and
the 2019 SNPR, the Commission is finalizing the requirements as
proposed in the 2019 SNPR, with the following clarifications in the:
1. Scope of the final rule, 16 CFR 1236.1, by removing the examples
of infant inclined sleep products, and aligning the scope of the rule
to be consistent with the definition of ``infant sleep product,'' to
avoid confusion about the scope of the rule, which includes inclined
and flat products;
2. Introduction of ASTM F3118-17a, by explaining more clearly that
both inclined and flat sleep products fall within the definition of an
``infant sleep product,'' and that the purpose of the rule is to reduce
deaths associated with known infant sleep hazards, including, but not
limited to, seat back or sleep surface angles that are greater than 10
degrees from horizontal;
3. Scope of ASTM F3118-17a, by revising section 1.3 to explain more
clearly that inclined and flat products fall within the scope of the
rule, and that products subject to the rule are infant sleep products
that do not already meet a mandatory standard for a product intended
for infant sleep. Consistent with the 2019 SNPR, revised section 1.3
lists existing infant sleep standards, but the final rule lists the
five CPSC sleep standards with a reference to the ASTM standard
incorporated by reference in each mandatory standard;
4. Scope of ASTM F3118-17a, by adding a new section 1.3.2 stating
that
[[Page 33025]]
crib mattresses that meet the voluntary standard for crib mattresses,
ASTM F2933, are not included within the scope of the rule. The final
rule does not cover a crib mattress because a crib mattress is not used
by itself, and instead, is used as the sleep surface in a crib, a
product that already must conform to a CPSC sleep standard;
5. Referenced documents in ASTM F3118-17a, by revising section 2.1
to add the voluntary standard for crib mattresses, ASTM F2933;
6. Definition of ``infant sleep product'' in ASTM F3118-17a, by
revising section 3.1.7 to remove the phrases ``freestanding'' and
``generally supported by a stationary or rocker base'' from the
definition, to not inadvertently exclude certain infant sleep products
from the scope of the rule, such as those that may not initially have a
base, or may be sold as an attachment to another product. Additionally,
we revised the age limit in this definition from ``approximately 5
months of age'' by removing the term ``approximately.'' This revision
is intended to reduce confusion about which products fall within the
scope of the rule, and to clarify that any infant sleep product
marketed or intended for an infant up to 5 months of age, and that is
not already covered by a CPSC sleep standard, falls within the scope of
the final rule;
7. Definitions in ASTM F3118-17a, by revising section 3.1 to remove
the definitions for ``accessory inclined sleep product,'' ``compact
inclined sleep product,'' and ``newborn inclined sleep product,'' to
simplify the regulation text, because these definitions are unnecessary
based on the other modifications made to ASTM F3118-17a in the final
rule, and because these products are subsumed within the definition of
an ``infant sleep product,'' and the final rule does not contain any
unique requirements for these products; \3\
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\3\ Note that in the 2019 SNPR the Commission proposed to revise
these terms by removing the word ``inclined.''
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8. Requirements in ASTM F3118-17a, by revising section 6.9 to
remove separate ``Maximum Seat Back Angle'' tests for three product
types (accessory, compact, and newborn), and leaving only the test for
``infant sleep products,'' because all products fall within the
definition of an ``infant sleep product'' in the final rule, and
because this test is the same for all products;
9. Requirements in ASTM F3118-17a, by revising section 6.9 and
6.9.1 to more accurately describe the name of the test by clarifying
that the seat back angle also refers to a ``sleep surface angle.'' This
revision is intended to reduce confusion, because flat sleep surfaces
do not have a seat back; and
10. Requirements in ASTM F3118-17a, by revising section 6.9.3 to
remove the references to accessory, compact, and newborn sleep
products, and to state that infant sleep products must meet the
requirements of 16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, including conforming to the definition of a bassinet/cradle.
This revision is intended to streamline the regulation text to reduce
confusion, and to add a specific requirement to meet the definition of
a bassinet, which clarifies that infant sleep products must have a
stand to meet the performance and labeling requirements in part 1218.
The Commission is also finalizing the amendment to part 1112, to
include ``infant sleep products'' in the list of children's product
safety rules for which CPSC has issued NORs, as well as the amendment
to part 1130, to identify ``infant sleep products'' specifically as a
subcategory of bassinets and cradles.
This final rule is based on information and analysis provided in
Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package, submitted to the Commission on May
12, 2021, which can be found on the Commission's website at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/FinalRuleSafetyStandardforInfantSleepProducts.pdf?7s3LjLlkZ4Vm_0GWP2.vstoEzBylG8xg.
II. Product Description
A. Scope of Products Within the Final Rule
The scope of products covered by the 2017 NPR tracked the scope of
ASTM F3118-17, covering ``a free standing product with an inclined
sleep surface primarily intended and marketed to provide sleeping
accommodations for an infant up to 5 months old or when the infant
begins to roll over or pull up on sides, whichever comes first.'' The
scope of products covered by the 2019 SNPR broadened from the 2017 NPR,
proposing to incorporate by reference ASTM F3118-17a with substantial
modifications, including revisions in the scope of the standard,
section 1.3, to remove the term ``inclined,'' and to include any infant
sleep product not currently covered by another CPSC mandatory rule for
a product intended for infant sleep: Bassinets/cradles, cribs (full-
size and non-full-size), play yards, and bedside sleepers. 84 FR at
60951.
For the final rule, the scope of products that fall within the rule
is consistent with the 2019 SNPR, and includes all of the inclined
sleep products in the 2017 NPR, plus additional products marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not currently covered by any of the five
CPSC sleep standards. Accordingly, as proposed in the 2019 SNPR, the
final rule includes the currently unregulated inclined sleep products,
such as frame-type inclined sleep products, hammocks, compact inclined
sleep products, and accessory inclined sleep products (collectively,
inclined sleep products). The final rule also includes the currently
unregulated non-inclined, flat, infant sleep products, which means
products with a seat back or sleep surface angle that is already 10
degrees or less from horizontal (i.e., baby boxes, in-bed sleepers,
baby nests and pods, rigid-sided and rigid-framed compact bassinets
without a stand or legs, various designs of ``travel bassinets'' with
soft padded or mesh sides, and baby tents (collectively, flat sleep
products)). 84 FR at 60951. Tabs C and E of Staff's Final Rule Briefing
Package contain additional information and characteristics, as well as
pictures of the infant sleep products subject to the final rule.
B. Products Excluded From the Scope of the Final Rule
Consistent with the 2019 SNPR, for the final rule, products with
inclined or adjustable seat back positions that are covered by other
CPSC standards, such as infant bouncer seats, strollers, hand-held
carriers, frame carriers, and infant swings, are excluded from the
scope of the ASTM infant inclined sleeper standard, and they are also
excluded from the scope of the final rule, unless the product is
specifically marketed for infant sleep for an infant up to 5 months of
age. Id. at 60951-52. If a product's packaging, marketing materials,
inserts, or instructions indicate that the product is for sleep, or
includes pictures of sleeping infants, then CPSC will consider the
product to be marketed for sleep.
Products that are already compliant with another CPSC sleep
standard, such as the bassinet standard (16 CFR part 1218), or the crib
standard (16 CFR part 1219), are excluded from the scope of the final
rule. Sleep wedge pillows and sleep positioners are out of scope for
the final rule, and may be covered by Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) regulations as medical devices, if they are marketed to treat a
medical condition, such as acid reflux. Infant pillows are also out of
scope for the final rule, and these products are subject to 16 CFR
Sec. 1500.18, ``Banned toys and other banned articles intended for use
[[Page 33026]]
by children.'' Hammocks intended as photo props are out of scope for
the final rule. Hammock accessories intended for shopping carts are
also not in scope, as those products are not intended for infant sleep.
Bath chairs with inclined backs are out of scope, as they are covered
by another standard and are not intended for infant sleep. Pet beds,
toy hammocks, and play tents labeled for children over 5 months are out
of scope of the final rule. Loungers, floor chairs, and rockers are out
of scope of the final rule, unless they are marketed for infant sleep
on the product itself or its packaging, marketing materials, inserts,
or instructions, or the product is advertised with pictures of sleeping
infants.
Finally, in response to a comment on the 2019 SNPR, the Commission
specifically is excluding from the scope of the final rule crib
mattresses that fall within the scope of the voluntary standard for
crib mattresses, ASTM F2933. A crib mattress, alone, does not meet the
definition of an ``infant sleep product,'' and is always used in
conjunction with a sleep product, such as a crib or play yard, that
falls within one of CPSC's sleep standards. The Commission issued a
notice of proposed rulemaking for crib mattresses in 2020, and intends
to finalize a separate rule later this fiscal year, providing
performance and labeling requirements for crib mattresses, based on
ASTM F2933.
C. Market Description 4
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\4\ Tab E of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package contains CPSC
staff's analysis of the market for infant sleep products.
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Infant sleep products covered by this rule may be purchased at
general retailers, online retailers, mattress and bedding stores, and
baby specialty stores. At least 60 small U.S.-based manufacturers and
importers are in this market, as well as five large domestic companies,
and dozens of foreign companies, some that ship these items directly to
customers in the United States via online marketplaces. More than a
thousand home-based manufacturers, hundreds based in the United States,
sell soft-sided baby nests and pods, in-bed sleepers, and infant
hammocks directly to consumers via online marketplaces and as third-
party sellers via major retailers' websites. We estimate total sales in
this market at more than $125 million per year, to at least a third of
U.S. households with newborns.
Products within the scope of the final rule compete with products
for infant sleep that are compliant with one of CPSC's sleep standards
and with other small, portable products that are not marketed for
sleep. One goal of the final rule is to make it clearer to consumers
which products are certified as compliant with a CPSC sleep standard,
regardless of the product name or advertising.
The proliferation of physically different products with similar
names (particularly ``bassinets''), the many suppliers in the market,
and new product types each season, reflect a competitive market for
innovative sleep products. New sleep products are marketed as filling a
need for a small, portable sleeping or napping space. Many items are
also marketed specifically to facilitate bed-sharing.\5\ In addition to
the marketing as secondary sleeping options, some of these compact and
relatively inexpensive sleep products are also marketed as primary
sleep spaces for families with limited living space and budget. Baby
boxes, in-bed sleepers, and hammocks, in particular, are marketed as
primary sleep spaces for babies.
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\5\ Tab D of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package contains CPSC
staff's analysis of the hazards associated with bed-sharing.
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CPSC did not find any evidence that consumer demand for compact,
inexpensive, and portable sleep spaces cannot be met by products
compliant with an existing CPSC sleep standard. Many small bassinets
that are compliant with CPSC's bassinet standard sell for $50 to $75
and have a footprint similar to the flat sleep products covered by this
rule. As for bed-sharing, bedside sleepers retail for as little as
$100. Cradles compliant with the bassinet and cradle standard have a
swinging function similar to a hammock with a frame, often at a lower
retail price. Innovative products compliant with the existing CPSC
sleep standards have been introduced in recent years, including small,
foldable play yards, oval cribs and bassinets, bassinets that are
attached to an adult chair, bassinets with rocking functions, and
bedside sleepers with a rocking base.
1. Inclined Sleep Products
The 2019 SNPR described four types of inclined sleep products
within the scope of the rule: Frame-type inclined sleep products,
hammocks, compact inclined sleep products, and accessory inclined sleep
products. 84 FR at 60951. We update the market for these products
below, grouping frame-type, compact, and accessory inclined products
into one category, and hammocks into another category.
(a) Hard-Frame Inclined Sleepers, Compact Foam Inclined Sleepers, and
Play Yard Accessories
Freestanding, inclined hard-frame sleepers retail for $40 to $120,
depending on brand and features, such as attached toys, fabric
coverings, battery-operated sounds, and adjustable positions. Compact
foam inclined sleepers retail for about $100. Hard-frame inclined play
yard accessories are not sold separately; they are included in the
price of the play yard.
In recent years, sales of inclined sleepers have totaled at least
722,000 units per year.\6\ The sales of these products alone total
nearly a quarter of all households with newborn infants, given that
just under 3.8 million live births occurred in the United States in
2018.\7\ Additionally, more than 4,000 adoptions from foreign countries
occurred, but most of those infants were at least 1-year-olds by the
time the adoption was finalized.\8\ We assume that some of the market
for inclined sleepers has shifted to other flat sleep product
categories covered by this rule, or shifted to small portable sleep
products compliant with existing CPSC sleep standards. Since the CPSC
published the NPR in 2017, some inclined sleep products have been
recalled or otherwise removed from the market. However, although
reselling recalled products is prohibited, discontinued items sold on
the secondary market that have not been recalled, as well as non-
recalled physically similar products sold by small companies, are still
available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The recalled inclined products alone had sales of nearly 6.5
million from May 2010 to August 2019. Assuming that the recalled
products represented most of the market, 6.5 million divided by 9
years is 722,000.
\7\ https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/births.htm.
\8\ https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/Intercountry-Adoption/adopt_ref/adoption-statistics-esri.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Baby Hammocks
Hammocks range in price from about $50 for a simple fabric hammock
without a frame, to more than $300 for a hammock with a wooden or metal
stand. Crib hammocks, which are intended to attach to cribs or play
yards of any brand, retail for about $50 to $100.
Baby hammocks are widely available from small domestic companies,
importers, and home-based sellers. The websites of several major
general retailers sell these items from third-party sellers. Hammocks
are made of a variety of fabrics and may include padded sides or
bottoms. They may come without a frame, or with a wooden
[[Page 33027]]
or metal stand. Some items are solid fabric, while others are mesh or
crochet. The market is fragmented, and all of the sellers in the United
States are small companies, although some sellers are importers of
items made by large foreign companies. The large number of sellers,
including at least one company that sells only baby hammocks, and
dozens of home-based sellers, suggests that thousands of baby hammocks
are sold each year.
2. Flat Sleep Products
(a) Flat Sleep Surface, Soft-Sided Products
The flat sleep surface, soft-sided products that are not covered by
a CPSC sleep standard include baby pods or baby nests, which are
marketed for use on a hard surface or as in-bed sleepers, and soft-
sided ``bassinets.'' Some soft-sided products are marketed for use
inside a crib or bassinet. Some sleep products are marketed as portable
or travel infant beds. The flat infant sleep products currently not
covered by any voluntary or mandatory sleep standard, but would be
regulated under the final rule, include:
Baby pods and baby nests--These products have a soft floor,
usually padded in some way, with low soft fabric or mesh sides,
resembling a small pet bed. They can be rectangular, oval, or figure 8-
shaped. Some come with a wedge pillow. They are sometimes marketed as
suitable for use inside a crib or play yard.
Soft-sided ``travel bassinets'' or ``travel beds''--These
products can have either a soft or semi-rigid floor. Some products come
with straps and zippers so that they can be rolled up and carried like
a backpack when not in use. Some are marketed as ``3-in-1'' products
that can also be used as a changing mat and include pockets for
diapers. Some products have a ``cocoon'' design, with a soft padded
top, intended to cover the body of the occupant.
Hand-held carriers marketed for sleep--These products are
marketed as both a hand-held carrier and a (soft) bassinet, suitable
for napping or sleeping.
In-bed sleepers--These products have low, soft sides and a
soft floor, specifically intended and marketed for bed-sharing.
Play yard accessories have mesh or fabric sides that attach to the
rails of the play yard and are marketed for infant sleep, including
``napping''; and they would not fall within the scope of the rule if
they are already compliant with the bassinet standard. Items marketed
as changing pads are not considered to be infant sleep products.
The prices for baby nests, baby pods, and in-bed sleepers range
from about $40 to $200, with the lower-priced items tending to come
from home-based manufacturers and foreign direct shippers, and the more
expensive items coming from larger U.S. companies. Smaller products
intended only for infants up to 5 months of age also tend to be cheaper
than larger products intended for children up to 2 years old. The
various soft-sided travel bassinets and ``travel beds,'' some that fold
up into a backpack, have a similar price range. At least 30 small
businesses, mostly importers, sell the soft-sided flat sleep surface
products.\9\ Dozens of foreign companies ship these sleep products
directly to U.S. customers via U.S. Internet retailers, and there are
more than 1,000 home-based sellers of baby pods and baby nests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ This number is approximate, as the proliferation of internet
retailing allows importers to enter and exit the market quickly, and
to switch their product line based on demand.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The estimated annual sales of in-bed sleepers alone are 1 million
units,\10\ based on public comment and staff analysis. The Durable
Nursery Products Exposure survey (DNPES) indicated that 38 percent of
parents slept with their child under 1 year of age at least once a
week, with 18 percent indicating they sleep with their child under 1
year of age every night. The CDC similarly found \11\ that 24.4 percent
of parents bed-shared with their infant ``often or always'' and 37
percent indicated they bed-shared ``rarely or sometimes.'' If parents
who regularly sleep with their infants commonly purchase or make a
soft-sided baby nest or other type of in-bed sleeper, then these
products could be owned by 25 percent of households with newborns,
representing about 1 million units sold per year, which is consistent
with the estimate from a public comment on the 2019 SNPR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ A public comment on the SNPR estimated the annual sales of
``in-bed sleep products'' at 500,000 to 1.5 million units, which is
consistent with the estimates in the DNPES and from CDC on
prevalence of bed-sharing.
\11\ Bombard JM, Kortsmit K, Warner L, et al., Vital Signs:
Trends and Disparities in Infant Safe Sleep Practices--United
States, 2009-2015. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2018;67:39-46. DOI:
https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm6701e1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Flat Sleep Surface, Rigid-Sided and Rigid-Framed Compact Bassinets,
Travel Bassinets, and Similar Products
This infant sleep product category includes flat sleep surface,
free-standing products that resemble a bassinet without a stand or
legs. Baby boxes and other rigid-sided products without a stand are
marketed for infant sleep, sometimes as ``compact'' or ``travel''
bassinets. Some compact bassinets have mesh sides with a rigid metal or
plastic frame. Larger rigid-sided items that comply with the play yard
standard, and play yard accessories that are compliant with the
bassinet standard, are out of scope for the final rule. Most flat sleep
surface, rigid-sided products are rectangular, but oval and round ones
are also available. As noted, some flat, soft-sided items are also
marketed as ``travel'' bassinets. The term ``bassinet'' is used in
product names for rigid-sided items with a stand that meet CPSC's
bassinet standard, but the term is also used in product names of flat
and inclined items without a stand, some with low and soft padded
sides, which do not meet the bassinet standard. The final rule
addresses this issue, and, in part, is intended to make it clearer to
consumers which products are safe for infant sleep, regardless of the
product name.
Rigid-sided and rigid-framed compact bassinets and travel bassinets
typically sell for about $50 to $150, which is comparable to the lower
end of the price range of bassinets that comply with the bassinet
standard. Retail prices for baby boxes start at about $50 to $75,
depending on the brand and decorative design, although some are sold
only as part of a $300, or more, bundle with clothes, diapers, and
other baby items. Baby boxes were given away for free by some state
governments and hospitals, so the cost to the consumer was $0, although
those organizations purchased them from a small domestic company that
is no longer offering them. Play yard accessories are not priced or
sold separately; rather, they are included in the price of the play
yard.
Products in this category have a variety of names. Several small
domestic manufacturers and small importers, as well as large domestic
and foreign companies, sell small, rigid-sided or rigid-framed products
that resemble a bassinet without a stand as ``compact,'' ``portable,''
or ``travel'' bassinets, or as infant ``travel beds.'' About a dozen
sellers ship these products from the United States, and a few foreign
companies sell through internet marketplaces. The presence of several
large domestic and foreign companies in this market, as well as
introductions of innovative products each year, indicate that a strong
consumer demand for these products. CPSC believes it likely that some
of the demand for inclined rigid-sided products has shifted to this
market sector. Unlike the soft-sided products,
[[Page 33028]]
this sector does not have many home-based businesses or foreign direct
shippers.
Baby boxes are a sub-type of compact bassinet that are made of
cardboard. They are sold in the United States by two small domestic
companies and one foreign company and can also be purchased directly
from several foreign companies. The sales are relatively small;
estimated at under 20,000 per year.\12\ This means that less than 1
percent of households with newborns purchase these items. Baby boxes
are sometimes marketed as ``Finnish'' baby boxes, because the
government of Finland provides new parents with a baby box or cash
equivalent. As noted, in the past, some state and local hospitals gave
away baby boxes to new parents or made them widely available through
social service agencies.\13\ Like other compact bassinets, baby boxes
are marketed as a primary sleep environment for newborns.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ A public comment estimated 2018 sales from two of the three
U.S. baby box companies at more than 10,000.
\13\ Similar programs now offer free cribs or play yards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Baby Tents
Baby tents, which are a small mesh or solid fabric products with a
fabric floor are marketed for sun protection, play, and baby sleep.
They are sometimes marketed as a combination of tent and ``travel bed''
or ``travel bassinet.'' Some baby tents come with flaps, covers, or
shades so that the baby can sleep in darkness. Some products come with
poles or stakes to fasten the tent to the ground or in the sand at the
beach. Some tents have a shallow fillable pool/sandbox in the bottom,
which indicates they are not intended primarily for sleep, but rather,
for play.
Baby tents retail for about $20 to $75; larger and more expensive
tents are available, but they are marketed for older children. Baby
tents are offered for sale on major internet general retailer websites
and in general retail stores by about a dozen small importers and a few
large companies. Dozens of foreign companies ship these baby tents
directly to U.S. customers via U.S. Internet retailers; the majority of
suppliers in this category are foreign direct shippers. Baby tents are
marketed as a specialty item for outdoor use, particularly beach trips
or camping, to shade the baby from sun and provide a place for playing
and sleeping. Indoor ``play'' tents are also marketed for sleep, but
those products are mostly marketed for children over 3 years of age.
Indoor play yards with tent-like covers are in the scope of the play
yard standard. Although baby tents are a relatively niche product,
compared to some of the other types of sleepers, there appears to be
sufficient demand for baby tents to support the market presence of
dozens of companies, including a few large companies selling a variety
of other baby products.
III. Incident Data and Hazard Patterns
A. Inclined Sleep Products
1. Incident Data
The 2017 NPR discussed 14 fatal incidents related to inclined sleep
products, which were reported to have occurred between January 1, 2005
and September 30, 2016. Eight of the 14 deaths involved rocker-like
inclined sleep products; in three cases, the unstrapped decedent was
found to have rolled over into a facedown position. Two additional
cases also reported a rollover into a facedown position, but the
reports did not include any information about the use of a restraint.
CPSC had little information about the cause or manner of the three
remaining deaths. The 2017 NPR recognized that reporting was ongoing
and that the number of reported fatalities could change. 82 FR at
16965-66.
The 2019 SNPR updated fatal and nonfatal incident reports
associated with the use of an inclined sleep product. At the time of
the 2019 SNPR, CPSC was aware of 451 incidents (59 fatal and 392
nonfatal) related to inclined sleep products that occurred from January
1, 2005 through June 30, 2019, and reported between October 1, 2016 and
June 30, 2019. This count included incidents reported after the
reporting end date stated in the 2017 NPR. Forty-three percent of the
incident reports (196 out of 451) were based solely on information from
manufacturers/retailers. Various sources, such as hotlines, internet
reports, newspaper clippings, medical examiners, and other state/local
authorities provided the remaining incident reports to CPSC. 84 FR at
60952-53. Tab A of the October 16, 2019 Staff SNPR Briefing Package
describes the incident data and the hazard patterns associated with
infant inclined sleep products at the time of the SNPR.
For the final rule, the Directorate for Epidemiology staff, Tab B
of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package, describes 71 new incident
reports associated with inclined sleep products since the 2019 SNPR. Of
the 71 new reported incidents, 10 are fatalities; among the remaining
61 nonfatal incidents, 17 reported an injury. Reporting is ongoing, and
therefore, the number of reported fatalities, nonfatal injuries, and
non-injury incidents may change in the future.
(a) Fatalities
Since the 2019 SNPR, the Commission is aware of 10 fatalities
associated with the use of an inclined sleep product that reportedly
occurred during the period from January 1, 2019 through December 31,
2020.
Three of the 10 fatal reports describe infants placed
supine (on their back) in a rocker-like sleeper product, but who ended
up rolling over, fully or partially, resulting in suffocations or
positional asphyxiations. Staff does not know whether a restraint was
used in any of these cases. All three decedents were 3- or 4-month-old
infants.
One report describes a fatality involving a foam-type
reclined infant seat. The seat was placed on an adult bed, where the
parents were also asleep. The seat was found tipped over on the floor,
with the 4-month-old decedent found underneath the seat.
One incident reports a fatality of a 3-month-old infant,
found supine in an infant rocker-like product (in the same position as
originally placed) with a blanket covering the infant's face.
Five remaining fatality reports provide very little
information on the incidents. Lack of any information on the
circumstances leading up to the death does not allow CPSC staff to
classify these deaths. Of the known ages, the decedents ranged in age
from 1 to 6 months old.
(b) Nonfatal Incidents
Since the 2019 SNPR, the Commission has received reports of 61
nonfatal incidents associated with the use of an inclined sleep product
that occurred between January 1, 2019 and December 31, 2020. Among
these 61 reports, 17 reports involved an injury. We describe the
severity of the 17 injuries below:
Four infants required hospital admission. Three of the
hospitalizations were for respiratory problems due to mold on the sleep
product, and one was for treatment of injuries from a fall when an
accessory-type product collapsed.
Three infants were treated and released from emergency
departments. Those infants were treated for respiratory problems from
exposure to mold or for fall injuries.
Ten infants required other medical care, mostly for
plagiocephaly (flat head syndrome), torticollis (twisted neck
syndrome), or both conditions, which were associated with prolonged use
of inclined sleep products; two of the 10
[[Page 33029]]
infants suffered minor bumps/bruises due to falls or near falls.
The remaining 44 incidents reported no injuries, or provided no
information about any injury. However, many of the descriptions
indicated the potential for a serious injury, or even death. Thirty-
four percent of the incidents involved infants 0 to 5 months of age,
and 9 percent involved infants 6 months to 12 months of age. CPSC does
not know the infant's age in 58 percent of the incidents.
2. Hazard Patterns
The 2017 NPR identified nine hazard patterns among the 657 reported
incidents associated with inclined sleep products. These hazard
patterns included: Design issues, lack of structural integrity,
inadequate restraints, electrical issues, non-product-related or
unknown issues, difficulty with correct positioning, miscellaneous
product-related issues, unspecified falls, and consumer comments. 82 FR
at 16965-66.
For the 2019 SNPR, CPSC staff considered all 451 reported incidents
(59 fatal and 392 nonfatal) to identify hazard patterns associated with
inclined sleep products; and staff described the variety of sleep
products considered, such as: Hammocks, which are suspended in air,
seat-like products meant to be placed on a floor level (yet incident
reports indicate these products often were not placed on floor level),
and products that sit on top of larger nursery products as attachments.
CPSC staff identified eight hazard patterns among 451 reported
incidents in the 2019 SNPR, which differed, depending on which product
was involved, and how the product was being used: Design issues,
electrical issues, consumer comments, undetermined issues (due to
confounding information), structural integrity issues, other product-
related issues, infant placement issues, and insufficient information.
Staff's identified hazard pattern categories were very similar between
the 2017 NPR and the 2019 SNPR. 84 FR at 60952-53.
For the final rule, staff again reports that the staff-identified
hazard categories for inclined sleep products are very similar to those
identified in the 2019 SNPR. Following a CPSC-issued safety recall on
inclined sleep products in April 2019, staff observed a surge of
reports related to the recall; these reports are combined with other
consumer comments in the hazard categories. Staff identified the
following hazard patterns among the 71 reported incidents (10 fatal and
61 nonfatal) associated with the use of infant inclined sleep products.
The categories are presented in descending order of frequency:
(a) Consumer comments: Thirty-one of the 71 reported incidents (44
percent) fall into this category. The reports consist of consumer
comments/observations of perceived safety hazards, complaints about
unauthorized sale of infant inclined sleep products, or inquiries
regarding the April 2019 safety recall on inclined sleep products.
Although one complaint describes a minor injury incident, none of the
remaining reports indicate that an incident actually occurred.
(b) Design of the inclined sleep product: Twenty-four of the 71
reported incidents (34 percent) fall into this category.
(i) Ten incidents report that infants rolled over--fully or
partially--from their original supine (on their back) position.
Although a few of the infants were strapped into the product, for
others, whether a restraint was used is unreported. Reports describe
infants as young as 1 month of age rolling over. Some parents/
caregivers, who witnessed and reported some of the nonfatal incidents,
were able to rescue distressed infants quickly; some of the other
infants died due to suffocation or asphyxiation.
(ii) One infant stopped breathing temporarily, due to difficulty
positioning his head correctly.
(iii) Eight incidents report that infants developed physical
deformations, such as plagiocephaly (flat head syndrome) and/or
torticollis (twisted neck syndrome), from extended product use.
(iv) According to five reported incidents, infants developed
respiratory ailments due to the growth of mold on the product.
The design category includes three deaths, three hospitalizations,
one ED visit, and eight non-hospitalized, non-ED injuries.
(c) Other product-related issues: Four of the 71 incidents (6
percent) report other product-related issues, such as instability
(posed by products that have completely or nearly flipped over) or
lock/latch problem (i.e., the sleep surface failed to remain in
position during use). One of the three instability incidents was a
fatality that occurred when a foam-type reclined seat tipped over and
fell from the adult bed to the floor, trapping the decedent underneath.
No injury is reported in this category.
(d) Lack of structural integrity: Three of the 71 incidents (4
percent) report components breaking, such as the rail, hardware, or
other unspecified part. This category includes one hospitalization and
one non-ED-treated injury due to a fall.
(e) Electrical issue: One of the 71 incidents (1 percent) describes
an odor emanating from the product after a short period of use
indicative of overheating; further investigation revealed molten
plastic inside. No injury is reported.
(f) Non-product-related issues: One of the 71 incidents (1 percent)
reports a fatality in an unsafe sleep environment. A 3-month-old was
placed supine (on their back) in an infant rocker-like product with a
blanket covering the face; the decedent was found in the same position,
with the blanket still covering the face.
(g) Insufficient information: Seven of the 71 incident reports (10
percent) contain insufficient information for staff to categorize them
accurately. For five deaths, staff has no information on the
circumstances of the deaths. Reports for two injuries in this category
describe unspecified falls treated in hospital EDs, with no information
on restraint usage.
Table 1 presents the distribution of the 71 reported incidents by
hazard patterns and severity of incidents.
Table 1--Hazard Patterns and Incident Severity Associated With Infant Inclined Products 2019-2020 Incidents
[Reported since 2019 SNPR]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total incidents Deaths Injuries
Issues -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Count Percentage Count Percentage Count Percentage
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Product-Related....................................... 63 89 4 40 15 88
Comments/Concerns................................. 31 44 .............. ............... 1 6
Design............................................ 24 34 3 30 12 71
Other Product-Related............................. 4 6 1 10 .............. ..............
Structural Integrity.............................. 3 4 .............. ............... 2 12
[[Page 33030]]
Electrical........................................ 1 1 .............. ............... .............. ..............
Non-Product-Related................................... 1 1 1 10 .............. ..............
Unsafe Sleep Environment.......................... 1 1 1 10 .............. ..............
Insufficient Information.............................. 7 10 5 50 2 12
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total......................................... 71 100 10 100 17 100
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: CPSC epidemiological databases CPSRMS and NEISS. Percentages may not add to sub-totals and totals due to rounding.
B. Flat Sleep Products
In response to the 2019 SNPR, the Commission received public
comments regarding the safety of non-inclined sleep products, or flat
sleep products, that do not fall within an existing CPSC sleep standard
or a voluntary standard that are available in the marketplace. Staff
completed a review of CPSC's epidemiological databases, CPSRMS and
NEISS, to respond to these comments and concerns.
Flat sleep products include: In-bed sleepers, baskets (that can
function as hand-held carriers as well), baby boxes, compact bassinets
(most of which are portable for travel), and baby tents. Based on the
descriptions in the incident reports received, some have soft, puffy
sides along the sleep area perimeter; others have semi-rigid sides,
with mesh or soft-padded sidewalls held in place by tubular structures
along the perimeter. Baby boxes have cardboard walls, while baby tents
have flexible wires which provide structural support for fabric/mesh
tent walls. All of these non-inclined sleep products are flat and come
with mattress pads. Some products have short legs; many can sit on the
floor or can be used on a bed or a couch. The data show that some
products were placed inside a standard-sized crib, play yard, or
bassinet.
For the final rule, we characterize the number of deaths and
injuries and the types of hazards related to flat sleep products.
CPSC's characterizations are based on anecdotal incident reports
received by the Commission. The number of emergency department (ED)-
treated injuries associated with flat sleep products, for the covered
time frame, is insufficient to derive any reportable national
estimates.\14\ Accordingly, we do not present injury estimates here,
but include ED-treated injuries in the total count of reported
incidents. Moreover, reporting is ongoing and staff considers 2019-2020
data incomplete, so the number of reported fatalities, nonfatal
injuries, and non-injury incidents reported here may change in the
future.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ According to the NEISS publication criteria, an estimate
must be 1,200 or greater, the sample size must be 20 or greater, and
the coefficient of variation must be 33 percent or smaller.
\15\ In the reports received by CPSC, consumers referred to flat
sleep products as ``cribs,'' ``bassinets,'' ``cosleepers,''
``cribettes,'' ``nests,'' ``pads,'' or ``positioners.'' Because of
the variety of terms used by consumers to describe these products--
often unfamiliar to CPSC staff--staff's data search for this
analysis was challenging, and staff believes it is possible that
some relevant reports may have been missed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Incident Data
CPSC staff received a total of 183 incident reports related to flat
sleep products available in the marketplace. These incidents reported a
date of occurrence between January 1, 2019 and December 31, 2020.
Manufacturer and retailer reports submitted through CPSC's ``Retailer
Reporting Program'' serve as the only source of information for 73
percent (133 out of 183) of the incidents. Of the 183 reported
incidents, 11 are fatalities. Among the remaining 172 nonfatal
incidents, 16 reported an injury. Additionally, staff's flat sleep
product data search was limited to children age 12 months or under,
because that is typically the manufacturer-recommended use age for
these products. One hundred and fifteen incident reports provided the
victim's age; among them, 24 involved a fatality or injury. Table 2
provides the age breakdown among the 183 incident reports.
Table 2--Age Distribution in Flat Sleep Products-Related Incidents in 2019-2020
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All incidents Injuries and fatalities
Age of child ----------------------------------------------------------------
Frequency Percentage Frequency Percentage
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unreported *................................... 68 37 3 11
One-Five Months................................ 89 49 19 70
Six-Eight Months............................... 18 10 4 15
Nine-Twelve Months............................. 8 4 1 4
----------------------------------------------------------------
Total...................................... 183 100 27 100
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: CPSC epidemiological databases CPSRMS and NEISS.
* Age may be ``unreported'' under two circumstances: age was unknown, or age was not reported, because the
incident involved no injury.
(a) Fatalities
The Commission is aware of 11 fatalities associated with the use of
a flat sleep product, meaning flat sleep surface products marketed for
infant sleep that are not currently within the scope of an existing
CPSC sleep standard or a voluntary standard, reported to have occurred
during the period of January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2020. Seven
of the 11
[[Page 33031]]
fatality reports describe a suffocation death, as follows:
A 1-month-old was found partially rolled over onto their
side in a soft-sided compact bassinet/travel bed.
A 2-month-old infant was found completely rolled over the
edge of an in-bed sleeper.
A 2-month-old was placed in an in-bed sleeper, in a prone
position, stomach down, with his face turned to one side; he was
discovered with part of his body outside the sleeper, face down into a
blanket.
A 2-month-old infant was put into a compact bassinet/
travel bed placed on top of an adult bed, with one side of the compact
bassinet/travel bed leaning against the wall. According to the official
report, the combination of the travel bed's non-reinforced flexible
bottom, along with the soft surface of the adult bed, allowed the
infant to sink; he was found trapped between the bed and the wall.
A 3-month-old, in a handheld basket that was placed on an
adult bed, was found completely rolled over from her original supine
position.
A 4-month-old was placed on his back in an in-bed sleeper
that was placed inside a standard bassinet; the infant was discovered
in a prone position deceased.
A 7-month-old was wrapped in a blanket and placed supine
in an in-bed sleeper. The infant was found deceased, having rolled over
into a prone position.
The remaining four fatalities are as follows:
A 1-month-old was placed in an in-bed sleeper inside a
play yard. The official reports describe the decedent as having
suffocated on the puffy sides of the sleeper or becoming entrapped
somehow, suffering positional asphyxia.
A 7-month-old was placed in an in-bed sleeper for a nap.
According to official reports, at some point, the infant got to the
edge of the adult bed and became entrapped between the footboard and
the mattress of the adult bed and died of positional asphyxia.
Official reports deemed the cause and manner of death for
two additional fatalities as undetermined. Both decedents were 1-month-
olds, one placed in a basket, while the other was in an in-bed sleeper.
(b) Nonfatalities
From among the 172 nonfatal reports, CPSC identified 16 injury
reports associated with the use of flat sleep products that occurred
between January 1, 2019 and December 31, 2020. We describe the severity
of the injury type among the 16 injuries below:
Two infants required hospital admission. An 8-day-old
infant suffered unspecified breathing difficulties; another 2-month-old
infant fell out of an in-bed sleeper and suffered head injuries when a
sibling jumped onto the couch where the in-bed sleeper was situated.
Ten infants, ranging in age from 1 month to 9 months,
required emergency department (ED) visits after falling out of the
sleeper product. For most cases, the sequence of events leading to each
fall was unreported. In two cases, the infant fell while being
transported in the sleeper; and in another case, the sleeper slipped
off of the adult bed on which it was placed. The injuries included head
injuries, such as a skull fracture, closed-head injury, and head
contusion, or other injuries, such as face abrasion and knee contusion.
Four other injury incidents reported an allergic reaction;
a mold-related breathing difficulty episode; laceration of the nose on
the rough mesh wall surface on the sleeper; and a fall when a sibling
pulled on the sleeper, causing it to flip over. One of these infants
required repeated visits to a medical professional, but the level of
care the other infants received was unspecified.
The remaining 156 incidents reported no injuries, or provided no
information about any injury. However, many of the descriptions were
similar to incidents in which a serious injury or death occurred.
Therefore, CPSC staff indicated the potential for a serious injury or
even death. Forty-nine percent of the incidents involved infants 0 to 5
months of age, and 4 percent involved infants 6 to 12 months of age.
The age was unknown in 37 percent of the incidents.
2. Hazard Patterns
Similar to the inclined sleep products, the hazard patterns
reported for the flat sleep products varied according to the type and
usage pattern of the product. Many of the products are new in the
marketplace, and consumers and safety advocates expressed concern about
their safety. Staff identified the hazard patterns among the 183
reported incidents (11 fatal and 172 nonfatal) associated with the use
of these flat sleep products. We present the staff-identified hazard
patterns below in descending order of frequency among the reports.
(a) Lock/Latch problems: One hundred and fifteen of the 183 reports
(63 percent) fall in this category. All but one of these reports
pertain to different models of a particular stand-alone compact
bassinet. The locking/latching mechanism that controls the opening/
closing of the cover on the product failed. Some reports describe that
the inability of the cover to open completely results in the product
not lying flat. The single report about a different product describes a
foldable sleeper not remaining flat; the unit reportedly folds up while
the baby is in the product. None of the reports mention any injuries.
(b) Comments/Concerns: Twenty-nine of the 183 reports (16 percent)
expressed consumers' or safety advocates' concerns about the perceived
safety hazard of a product, non-compliance with the relevant
standard(s) for which a product is being labeled, and/or misleading
marketing statements about a product. None of the reports indicate that
an incident actually occurred.
(c) Falls/Containment issues: Twelve of the 183 incidents (7
percent) report an infant falling out of the product or an infant not
being kept contained within the product. Examples include infants
rolling out of a sleeper onto an adult bed and then onto floor; an
infant falling out of a sleeper when a sibling jumped onto the couch
containing the sleeper; an infant crawling/rolling (unwitnessed) out of
a sleeper and getting entrapped between an adult bed frame and
mattress. This category includes one death, one hospital admission, and
nine ED visits.
(d) Instability issues: Twelve of the 183 reported incidents (7
percent) describe problems with the product not remaining stable. The
incident reports describe some products with legs lifting up higher or
leaning on one side; other products have slipped off or flipped over
from the adult beds/couches on which they were resting. This category
includes two reported injuries, one involving an ED visit.
(e) Asphyxiation/Suffocation hazard: Nine of the 183 indents (5
percent) fall into this category. The products were compact bassinets/
travel beds, baskets, as well as in-bed sleepers, one being used inside
a standard bassinet and another, inside a play yard. All but one of the
infants had rolled over from their initial position--either fully or
partially; positional information is not available for one infant.
Eight of the incidents were fatalities due to suffocation or positional
asphyxia; one was a near-suffocation episode, with a parent nearby to
rescue the infant.
(f) Miscellaneous product-related issues: Three of the 183 incident
reports (2 percent) are about mold or quality of the product material.
Two of the three products were in-bed sleepers, and the third was a
compact bassinet/travel bed. All three report an injury.
[[Page 33032]]
(g) Undetermined issues: In three of the 183 incident reports (2
percent), staff could not definitively identify the issue involved. Two
of the incidents were fatalities; in both cases, CPSC Field
investigation reports indicate that the cause of death is undetermined.
The third incident resulted in a hospitalization due to unspecified
breathing difficulties suffered by the infant.
C. Safety Alerts, Press Releases, and Product Recalls
The Commission issued two safety alerts involving infant inclined
sleep products. A May 31, 2018 safety alert \16\ advised of infant
rollover deaths in inclined sleep products, and reminded caregivers to
always use restraints and to stop using the product as soon as an
infant can roll over. An April 5, 2019 safety alert \17\ advised
consumers to stop using the inclined sleep product when an infant
reaches 3 months of age, or as soon as an infant exhibits rollover
capabilities. Since issuing the 2019 SNPR, the Commission issued two
press releases regarding infant inclined sleep products. A January 16,
2020 press release warned the public about the risk of suffocation
associated with the Summer Infant SwaddleMe By Your Bed Sleeper, an
infant inclined sleeper. The release advised consumers to stop using
the product immediately.\18\ An October 31, 2020 press release warned
consumers that infant inclined sleep products were not safe for infant
sleep based on the results of the Mannen Study, and advised caregivers
to stop using infant sleep products with an inclined seat back of more
than 10 degrees.\19\
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\16\ https://www.cpsc.gov/content/cpsc-consumer-alert-caregivers-urged-to-use-restraints-with-inclined-sleep-products.
\17\ https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/News-Releases/2019/CPSC-ALERT-CPSC-and-Fisher-Price-Warn-Consumers-About-Fisher-Price-Rock-N-Play-Due-to-Reports-of-Death-When-Infants-Roll-Over-in-the-Product.
\18\ https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/News-Releases/2020/CPSC-Warns-Consumers-to-Stop-Using-Summer-Infant-USA-Inc-s-SwaddleMe-By-Your-Bed-Sleeper.
\19\ https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/News-Releases/2020/CPSC-Cautions-Consumers-Not-to-Use-Inclined-Infant-Sleep-Products.
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The Commission also conducted numerous recalls involving infant
inclined sleep products. The 2019 SNPR stated that from May 10, 2000 to
August 20, 2019, CPSC conducted 13 consumer-level recalls involving
infant inclined sleep products. 84 FR at 60953-54. CPSC conducted
recalls in response to hazards involving strangulation, suffocation,
falls, structural stability, entrapment, exposure to mold, and death.
Six recalls involved infant hammocks, six recalls involved infant
inclined sleep products, and one recall involved an infant inclined
sleep accessory included with a play yard. Id. Tab G in the October
2019 Staff SNPR Briefing Package contains a detailed chart outlining
recalls involving infant inclined sleep products up through August 20,
2019.
Since the issuance of the 2019 SNPR, CPSC conducted six additional
recalls for a suffocation hazard involving infant inclined sleep
products. These six recalls affected approximately 268,300 units. Tab F
of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package contains a chart outlining these
recalls. CPSC did not conduct any recalls for flat sleep products from
August 2019 through January 2021.
IV. Overview of CPSC Sleep Standards
The final rule would require that any ``infant sleep product,''
defined as a product marketed or intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5 months old, and that is not already
subject to one of CPSC's mandatory standards for infant sleep, must
meet the requirements of the mandatory standard for bassinets and
cradles, 16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
including conforming to the definition of a ``bassinet/cradle.''
Currently, the five mandatory CPSC sleep standards are: \20\
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\20\ Tab E of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package contains a
description of each CPSC sleep standard and the associated voluntary
standard the rule is based upon.
16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standards for Non-Full-Size Baby
Cribs
16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standards for Play Yards, and
16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
The Commission considers products that fall within the scope of a
CPSC sleep standard to generally follow safe sleep principles.
Additionally, caregivers can expect that regulated products intended
for infant sleep are tested for compliance to the applicable standard,
as well as to any other applicable CPSC rule, such as lead in paint and
lead content. Pursuant to section 14 of the CPSA, products within the
scope of a children's product safety rule, which includes all of CPSC's
sleep standards, must be tested for compliance to the standard by a
CPSC-accepted third party laboratory, and such compliance must be
certified by the manufacturer or importer of the product. Staff
regularly participates in ASTM subcommittees for these products, and
routinely updates incident data associated with regulated products, to
address identified hazards through the ASTM process. If a voluntary
standard that has been adopted by the Commission is revised to address
identified hazards, section 104(b)(4)(B) of the CPSIA provides an
update process, whereby the revised voluntary standard becomes the new
mandatory standard.\21\ Additionally, section 104(b)(2) of the CPSIA
requires the Commission to periodically review and revise rules issued
under section 104, to ensure that such rules provide the highest level
of safety for such products that is feasible. Table 3 summarizes CPSC
sleep standards applicable to regulated infant sleep products.
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\21\ Under section 104(b)(4)(B) of the CPSIA, the organization
must notify the Commission of a revised voluntary standard, and the
revised standard becomes a consumer product safety standard issued
by the Commission unless within 90 days after notification, the
Commission determines that the revised standard does not improve the
safety of the consumer product covered by the standard, and the
Commission is retaining the existing consumer product safety
standard. The revised voluntary standard will become the mandatory
standard, effective 180 days after the Commission received
notification of the revision (or a later date specified by the
Commission in the Federal Register). 15 U.S.C. 2056a(b)(4)(B).
[[Page 33033]]
Table 3--Regulated Infant Sleep Products and Applicable Standards
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Product Voluntary standard Mandatory standard
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bassinet/Cradle....................... ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 \22\........... 16 CFR 1218.
Full-Size Crib........................ ASTM F1169-19...................... 16 CFR 1219.
Non-Full-Size Crib.................... ASTM F406-19....................... 16 CFR 1220.
Play Yard............................. ASTM F406-19....................... 16 CFR 1221.
Bedside Sleeper....................... ASTM F2906-13...................... 16 CFR 1222.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some products currently marketed or intended for infant sleep are
not regulated by one of the five existing CPSC sleep standards.
Additionally, new products continue to enter the market for infant
sleep, but some are also not within the scope of an existing CPSC sleep
standard. Such products may not follow safe sleep principles, and are
not tested for compliance to a CPSC sleep standard. These unregulated
sleep products collectively include products such as: Infant inclined
sleep products, in-bed sleepers, baby boxes, compact/travel bassinets
without handles or handholds, and infant travel tents. Hand-held
bassinet/cradles are regulated as part of 16 CFR part 1225, Safety
Standard for Hand-Held Infant Carriers, but part 1225 does not address
hazards associated with infant sleep. Accordingly, hand-held carriers
are unregulated if marketed or intended for infant sleep.
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\22\ CPSC's mandatory standard, 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, incorporates by reference ASTM
F2194-13, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Bassinets and
Cradles, with modifications to make the standard more stringent. In
2016, ASTM revised the voluntary standard to include the
modifications set forth in the mandatory standard. Accordingly, ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1 is substantially similar to the mandatory standard,
and we assess this version of the voluntary standard in this
preamble, to simplify our analysis.
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The final rule seeks to address hazards associated with infant
sleep products, both inclined and flat. Products that already meet a
CPSC sleep standard are, by definition, outside the scope of the rule.
The final rule addresses hazards associated with infant sleep products
by requiring them to meet the requirements of the bassinet and cradle
standard, 16 CFR part 1218, including conforming to the definition of a
``bassinet/cradle.''
V. Voluntary Standards Overview--ASTM F3118 and ASTM F2194
A. Infant Inclined Sleep Products--ASTM F3118
1. History
As a result of incidents associated with the use of inclined sleep
products, the Commission directed CPSC staff to work with ASTM to
develop voluntary requirements to address the hazard patterns related
to the use of inclined sleep products. ASTM first approved ASTM F3118
on April 1, 2015, and published it in May 2015. Through the ASTM
process, CPSC staff consulted with manufacturers, retailers, trade
organizations, laboratories, consumer advocacy groups, consultants, and
members of the public. The current standard, ASTM F3118-17a, was
approved on September 1, 2017, and published in October 2017. This is
the fourth revision of the standard since it was first published in May
2015. ASTM F3118-17a states that it is intended to address hazards from
falls, positional asphyxiation, and obstruction of nose and mouth by
bedding.
2. Description
The 2017 NPR described the key provisions of ASTM F3118-17,
including: Scope, terminology, general requirements, performance
requirements, test methods, marking and labeling, and instructional
literature. 82 FR at 16967. The 2019 SNPR proposed to incorporate by
reference the most recent version of the voluntary standard, ASTM
F3118-17a, which is substantially the same as ASTM F3118-17, except
that the ``accessory'' definition was updated to match the modification
recommended in the 2017 NPR. Like the previous version, ASTM F3118-17a
describes the scope of the voluntary standard, defines terms for
various types of infant inclined sleep products, and sets out
requirements for performance (such as for structural integrity and
stability) and for warnings and instructions. As discussed elsewhere in
this preamble, CPSC's final rule makes substantial modifications to
ASTM F3118-17a.
3. CPSC Staff's Work Within the ASTM Process
CPSC staff's work on the infant inclined sleep product voluntary
standard arose from staff's work through the ASTM process on the
voluntary standard for bassinets and cradles in approximately 2011, in
preparation for a proposed rule on bassinets and cradles. ASTM began
developing the infant inclined sleep products voluntary standard to
address hammocks and inclined sleep products, whose product
characteristics at that time did not appear to align with bassinets,
because the bassinets standard requires a sleep surface of 10 degrees
or less, while the inclined product category at that time included
products with an incline of 10 to 30 degrees. Staff has been actively
participating in the development of the voluntary standard for inclined
sleep products since then.
CPSC staff participated in the ASTM process by attending
meetings,\23\ working on task groups, commenting on ballots,\24\ and
providing incident data. CPSC staff provided incident data and hazard
pattern analysis associated with inclined sleep products for the 2017
NPR and the 2019 SNPR, and updated this information in this final rule
preamble. Additionally, staff last provided ASTM with incident data
associated with inclined sleep products in May 2018.
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\23\ Meeting logs detailing CPSC's work with ASTM on the infant
inclined sleep product voluntary standard can be found here: https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/FOIA/ReportList?field_nfr_date_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bmonth%5D=&field_nfr_date_value_1%5Bvalue%5D%5Byear%5D=&field_nfr_type_value=meeting&title=incline&=Apply.
\24\ CPSC staff's correspondence with ASTM since issuing the
2017 NPR regarding these products can be found on
www.regulations.gov under supporting materials: https://www.regulations.gov/docket/CPSC-2017-0020/document?documentTypes=Supporting%20%26%20Related%20Material.
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Since the SNPR published on November 12, 2019, ASTM has not updated
ASTM F3118-17a to address hazards associated with inclined products.
Staff's SNPR Briefing Package was posted on the Commission's website on
October 16, 2019, before ASTM held fall meetings on voluntary standards
for juvenile products, and before the Commission voted on the SNPR, so
that ASTM members and other stakeholders could review the package,
including the Mannen Study, before the ASTM meetings, and so that staff
could discuss the package and the Mannen Study with ASTM members. The
ASTM Agenda for Infant Inclined Sleep Products meeting that occurred on
October 21, 2019, included a link to Staff's SNPR Briefing Package.
CPSC staff discussed the 2019 SNPR Briefing
[[Page 33034]]
Package at the ASTM meetings in October 2019, including the ASTM
subcommittees for infant inclined sleep products, in-bed sleepers, and
bassinets, discussing the Mannen Study findings, as well as addressing
the fact that flat sleep products were covered by the SNPR. Dr. Mannen
attended the subcommittee meeting for infant inclined sleep products
via telephone, to discuss the Mannen Study and to answer questions.
After the SNPR published in the Federal Register on November 12,
2019, CPSC staff urged the ASTM subcommittee for ASTM F3118 to meet and
discuss how to address issues presented in the 2019 SNPR. However, the
F3118 subcommittee did not meet again until August 26, 2020, following
a July 16, 2020 letter from CPSC staff.\25\ After staff's letter, the
ASTM F3118 subcommittee established a task group to revise the infant
inclined sleep standard's title, introduction, and scope, to be more in
line with the proposal in the 2019 SNPR. In December 2020, the ASTM
subcommittee introduced ballot F15-18 (20-1) to change the standard's
title, introduction, and scope to include all infant sleep products
(and not just inclined sleep products). The ballot sought to:
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\25\ Available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/IISPLettertoASTM-07162020.pdf?6ntZUkyau.r2mlrQnM31s0B3g1EkUg.9.
Remove the word ``inclined'' throughout the standard.
Include in the scope, products intended for infants up to 12
months old.
Include in the scope, products marketed or intended to provide
sleeping accommodations.
Change the scope to include all infant sleep products that do
not fall within the scope of an existing infant sleep product standard:
[ssquf] Full-Sized Cribs (F1169)
[ssquf] Bassinets (F2194)
[ssquf] Bedside Sleepers (F2906)
[ssquf] Non-Full-Size Cribs/Play Yards (F406)
Exempt crib mattresses from the scope of the standard.
Limit the sleep surface in all positions to be 10 degrees or
less.
However, in January 2021, the ballot did not pass due to six negative
votes. The negative votes objected to a variety of different aspects of
the ballot, including four broad categories:
1. That the proposal would discourage innovation and be too broad;
2. That the ballot appeared to allow products that fall under other
sleep standards to opt to meet ASTM F3118 instead;
3. That the voter could not support changing the title,
introduction, and scope without seeing the underlying requirements; and
4. Editorial comments.
The ASTM F3118 subcommittee discussed the ballot results at a
meeting on January 27, 2021. During this meeting, ASTM members
disagreed on the intent and consequences of changes to the voluntary
standard, and the meeting ended without a consensus on a path forward.
However, CPSC staff participates on an ASTM task group to review safe
sleep requirements across infant sleep product standards (the
comparison task group), and reports that this task group has met at
least four times since the January 27, 2021 meeting. Based on the
ballot results and the discussions in these ASTM meetings, staff
advises that it is unlikely that ASTM will be able to move forward with
changes to ASTM F3118 that address safe sleep requirements in the near
term.\26\
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\26\ The ASTM task group approach is different than CPSC's
approach in this final rule, because ASTM is attempting to put safe
sleep requirements in ASTM F3118, rather than rely on the
performance and labeling requirements in the bassinets and cradles
standard. The Commission determines in this final rule that the
performance and labeling requirements in the bassinet standard are
the minimum safe sleep requirements for infant sleep products. Thus,
it remains unclear whether ASTM's approach can be successful.
However, if the ASTM committee revises ASTM F3118-17a and notifies
the Commission, the staff will evaluate the revised voluntary
standard at that time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recently, on April 22, 2021, at an ASTM task group meeting on the
title, introduction, and scope of the voluntary standard, task group
members discussed balloting the proposed regulatory text in the 2019
SNPR for the voluntary standard, to prevent the sale of infant inclined
sleep products that purport to certify to ASTM F3118-17a, meaning
products with an incline above 10 degrees, while ASTM works to revise
the voluntary standard to be more in line with the 2019 SNPR. However,
the task group does not plan to ballot the 2019 SNPR requirement that
infant sleep products meet the requirements of the bassinet standard,
because ASTM is working to create minimum safe sleep requirements in a
revised ASTM F3118 standard. Staff is participating in this effort as
well, but staff has advised the task group that staff's expertise does
not suggest that requirements that are different and less stringent
than the requirements in the bassinet standard will adequately address
the risk of injury associated with infant sleep products. Additionally,
staff's conclusion that the Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
contains the minimum safe sleep requirements for these products is
supported by the assessment presented in Staff's Final Rule Briefing
Package and in this final rule.
B. Bassinets and Cradles--ASTM F3194
1. History and Description
The voluntary standard for bassinets and cradles, ASTM F2194, was
first approved and published by ASTM in 2002, as ASTM 2194, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for Bassinets and Cradles. The voluntary
standard was revised several times between 2002 and CPSC's promulgation
of a mandatory standard for bassinets in 2013. CPSC's mandatory
standard for bassinets and cradles, codified at 16 CFR part 1218,
incorporates by reference ASTM F2194-13, with the following
modifications to the voluntary standard:
1. Clarify the scope of the standard to include multi-mode products
in which a mode meets the definition of a ``bassinet/cradle'' (seat
incline is 10 degrees or less from horizontal)
2. Modify the stability test procedure to require the use of a
newborn CAMI dummy, rather than an infant CAMI dummy.
3. Add stability requirements for removable bassinet beds.
4. Add more stringent mattress flatness performance requirements to
limit measured angle to 10 degrees (versus 14 degrees allowed in ASTM
F2194-13).
5. Exempt bassinets that are less than 15 inches across from the
mattress flatness requirement.
In 2016, ASTM approved and published the most recent version of the
standard, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, with new requirements to bring the
voluntary ASTM standard in line with the mandatory standard for
bassinets in 16 CFR part 1218. In developing ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, ASTM
harmonized the voluntary standard with all modifications specified in
part 1218. In addition to including all modifications contained in part
1218, ASTM added:
1. Additional clarification that strollers with a removable
bassinet must be tested to the bassinet standard,
2. Minor formatting and editorial changes, and
3. An additional warning statement to be applied to bassinet bed
products that are removable from the base/stand without the use of
tools and that contain a lock/latch mechanism that secures the bassinet
bed to the base/stand.
Staff assessed the additional changes to the voluntary standard, beyond
harmonization with 16 CFR part 1218,
[[Page 33035]]
and advises that the changes are either non-substantive, or an
improvement in safety. We evaluate and discuss ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 in
this preamble to the final rule, and CPSC will update the reference in
part 1218 to ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 as soon as feasible.
The more significant requirements of ASTM F2194 include:
Scope--describes the types of products intended to be
covered under the standard.
Spacing of rigid-side components--is intended to prevent
child entrapment between both uniformly and non-uniformly spaced
components, such as slats.
Openings for mesh/fabric--is intended to prevent the
entrapment of children's fingers and toes, as well as button
ensnarement.
Static load test--is intended to ensure structural
integrity even when a child three times the recommended (or 95th
percentile) weight uses the product.
Stability requirements--is intended to ensure that the
product does not tip over when pulled on by a 2-year-old male.
Sleeping pad thickness and dimensions--is intended to
minimize gaps and the possibility of suffocation due to excessive
padding.
Tests of locking and latching mechanisms--is intended to
prevent unintentional folding while in use.
Suffocation warning label--is intended to help prevent
soft bedding incidents.
Fabric-sided openings test--is intended to prevent
entrapments.
Rock/swing angle requirement--is intended to address
suffocation hazards that can occur when latch/lock problems and
excessive rocking or swinging angles press children into the side of
the bassinet/cradle.
Occupant restraints--is intended to prevent incidents
where unused restraints have entrapped and strangled children.
Side height requirement--is intended to prevent falls.
Segmented mattress flatness--is intended to address
suffocation hazards associated with ``V'' shapes that can be created by
the segmented mattress folds.
The voluntary standard also includes: (1) Torque and tension tests
to prevent components from being removed; (2) requirements for several
bassinet/cradle features to prevent entrapment and cuts (minimum and
maximum opening size, small parts, hazardous sharp edges or points, and
edges that can scissor, shear, or pinch); (3) requirements for the
permanency and adhesion of labels; (4) requirements for instructional
literature; and (5) corner post extension requirements intended to
prevent pacifier cords, ribbons, necklaces, or clothing that a child
may be wearing from catching on a projection. 78 FR 63019, 63020-21
(Oct. 23, 2013).
2. CPSC Staff's Work Within the ASTM Process
CPSC has been working with ASTM on the voluntary standard for
bassinets and cradles since before publication of the original
voluntary standard in 2002. CPSC began rulemaking under section 104 of
the CPSIA, to create a mandatory standard for bassinet and cradles
based on the voluntary standard, in approximately 2009, following
passage of the CPSIA. CPSC issued a notice of proposed rulemaking in
2010 (75 FR 22303 (Apr. 28, 2010)), a supplemental notice of proposed
rulemaking in 2012 (77 FR 64055 (Oct. 18, 2012)), and a final rule in
2013 (78 FR 63019 (Oct. 28, 2013)). The final rule is codified at 16
CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles. The final
rule incorporated by reference the then-current voluntary standard,
ASTM F2194-13, with modifications to make the standard more stringent.
CPSC staff has continually participated in the ASTM process,
including attending subcommittee meetings,\27\ participating in task
groups,\27\ commenting and voting on ballots to revise the voluntary
standard,\28\ and providing incident data, when requested. This has
included ASTM's recent efforts to address hazards associated with
currently unregulated flat sleep products, such as compact bassinets,
baby boxes, and in-bed sleepers, since approximately 2015. ASTM has not
yet been successful in adding any of these flat sleep products to the
bassinet standard.
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\27\ CPSC meeting logs associated with staff's work with ASTM
can be found here: https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/FOIA/ReportList?field_nfr_date_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bmonth%5D=&field_nfr_date_value_1%5Bvalue%5D%5Byear%5D=&field_nfr_type_value=meeting&title=bassinet&=Apply.
\28\ CPSC correspondence with the ASTM Subcommittee for
Bassinets and Cradles can be found here: https://cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/VoteCommentToASTMBassinet_10162020.pdf?NbTgq8p5FBJ12mr1IAQeG0weJUDh_6ZI.
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CPSC staff's correspondence with ASTM states that staff is opposed
to removing or reducing the requirements of the bassinet and cradle
voluntary standard to create new requirements specifically for these
products, when such requirements are inconsistent with safe sleep
principles already required in the bassinet standard. Accordingly, for
example, in a December 12, 2019 letter to both the inclined sleep and
bassinet subcommittees, CPSC staff reiterated concerns with weakening
the safe sleep requirements in the voluntary standard for bassinets and
cradles in order to accommodate unregulated products, such as in-bed
sleepers, compact bassinets, and baby boxes.\29\ Additionally, on
October 16, 2020, staff voted negatively on an ASTM ballot to modify
the bassinet standard to include less stringent stability and side
height requirements for compact bassinets, versus traditional
bassinets.\30\ To ensure safe sleep, staff's negative ballot vote urged
ASTM to maintain the same side height and stability requirements for
compact bassinets that are required of bassinets.
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\29\ Available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/LetterToASTMBassinet_IISP_121219.pdf?uMq_ImMYhtrDmFkoDH9I6vdwNI0hsm00
.
\30\ Available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/VoteCommentToASTMBassinet_10162020.pdf?NbTgq8p5FBJ12mr1IAQeG0weJUDh_6ZI. CPSC's website, at https://www.cpsc.gov/Regulations-Laws--Standards/Voluntary-Standards, contains information on staff
activities as well as correspondence with voluntary standards
organizations.
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In June 2019, ASTM began to develop a separate in-bed sleeper
voluntary standard. Staff provided data to ASTM regarding in-bed
sleepers in 2017, and has participated in ASTM meetings for in-bed
sleepers since June 2019, as well as working with performance and
labeling task groups.\31\ Task groups working on the in-bed sleeper
standard have been unable to reach consensus on performance
requirements for in-bed sleepers, and have been focusing on developing
warning labels for these products. CPSC staff continues to participate
in all of these ASTM efforts, and to urge ASTM members to retain safe
sleep principles in standards development. For example, in a July 8,
2020 letter to the Subcommittee Chairman for ASTM's in-bed sleeper
committee, CPSC staff stated:
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\31\ Meeting logs describing ASTM meetings are available on
CPSC' website: https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/FOIA/ReportList?field_nfr_date_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bmonth%5D=&field_nfr_date_value_1%5Bvalue%5D%5Byear%5D=&field_nfr_type_value=meeting&title=in-bed&=Apply.
We would like to be clear that based on our evaluation of
incident data related to in-bed sleepers, we have great concerns
regarding the safety of in-bed sleepers and the feasibility of
developing any safety standard that fully addresses potential
hazards. Based on the 12 deaths discussed with the In-bed Sleeper
Data Task Group members, CPSC staff cannot foresee how these
products can be designed and regulated to ensure safe use for
infants. Staff is not confident that an in-bed sleeper voluntary
standard that differs
[[Page 33036]]
from the current bassinet standard will result in a safe sleep
product.\32\
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\32\ See July 8, 2020 Letter from C. Kish to ASTM Subcommittee
for In-bed Sleepers, available at: https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/InbedSleepers_07082020ASTM%20Letter.pdf?3SpzS3cG3zvPjCLFamcCz.9FxNjpUu2s.
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VI. Assessment of the Voluntary Standards To Address Identified Hazard
Patterns Associated With Infant Sleep Products
A. Inclined Sleep Products
The 2019 SNPR assessed the adequacy of ASTM F3118-17a to address
the risk of injury associated with inclined sleep products. 84 FR
60955-56. The assessment relied, in part, on the Mannen Study regarding
the safety of inclined sleep surfaces for infant sleep, attached as Tab
B to Staff's SNPR Briefing Package, and also summarized in the 2019
SNPR. Id. at 60954. Based on the Mannen Study, CPSC staff advised that
a flat sleep surface, meaning one that does not exceed 10 degrees from
the horizontal, is the safest sleep surface for infants. Id.
Accordingly, the Commission proposed in the 2019 SNPR to remove the
term ``inclined'' in CPSC's mandatory standard, and to require that all
sleep products not otherwise subject to a CPSC sleep standard (full-
size cribs, non-full-size cribs, play yards, bedside sleepers, and
bassinets and cradles), meet the requirements of 16 CFR part 1218,
Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, which, among other
requirements, mandates a seat back/sleep surface angle intended for
sleep to be 10 degrees or less from horizontal. Id.
Here, we summarize the results of the Mannen Study again, summarize
the assessment of ASTM F3118-17a in the 2019 SNPR, and update our
assessment to determine whether the voluntary standards, ASTM F3118-
17a, or ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, are adequate to address the incidents
associated with inclined sleep products, including the 71 new incidents
reported since the 2019 SNPR.
Based on the following analysis, the Commission determines that
ASTM F3118-17a is inadequate to address the risk of injury associated
with inclined sleep products, and that more stringent requirements are
necessary in the final rule to further reduce the risk of injury
associated with infant inclined sleep products. Specifically, the
Commission determines that the performance requirements in the
mandatory standard, 16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and
Cradles, would adequately address the risk of injury associated with
these products.
1. Mannen Study Summary
During the development of the 2019 SNPR, staff reviewed 450
incidents, 59 were deaths that occurred while in infant inclined sleep
products. Commission staff contracted with Dr. Erin Mannen, Ph.D., a
mechanical engineer with a biomechanics specialization, to conduct
infant testing to evaluate the design of inclined sleep products. The
Mannen Study examined how the degree of a seatback angle affects an
infant's ability to move within the products and whether those designs
directly impact safety or present a risk factor that could contribute
to the suffocation of an infant. The testing compared infants' muscle
movement and oxygen saturation on a flat crib mattress at 0 degrees, 10
degrees, and 20 degrees, versus seven different inclined sleep
products. The Mannen Study concluded that none of the inclined sleep
products tested were safe for infant sleep. Id.
The Mannen Study concluded that muscle activity for infants who
rolled over in inclined sleep products with a 20-degree incline sleep
surface was significantly different than in products with a zero-degree
incline surface. The increased demand on the abdominal muscles could
lead to increased fatigue and suffocation if an infant is unable to
reposition themselves after rolling from a supine to prone position.
The Mannen Study also concluded that inclined sleep products with a 10-
degree or less sleep surface incline do not significantly impact infant
motion or muscle activity. Based on the Mannen Study, staff recommended
that 10 degrees is the maximum sleep surface angle that should be
allowed for any product intended for infant sleep, similar to the
requirements found in the EN 1130:2019 children's cribs, EN 1466:2014
carry cots, and the AS/NZS 4385:96 infant rocking cradles international
standards. Id.
2. Hazard Pattern Categories
In the 2019 SNPR, CPSC reviewed 451 reported incidents involving
inclined sleep products, which included 59 fatalities and 96 injuries.
CPSC identified seven hazards that involved deaths and injuries (for
this analysis, we did not consider patterns, such as consumer comments,
that did not involve injuries or deaths):
Design issues (31 percent). This hazard involved 19
deaths, 17 resulting from infants rolling over into a prone (face down)
position. An additional 71 injuries were reported in this category,
including five hospitalizations and four emergency department visits.
Thirty-three percent of the reported incidents involved infants rolling
from their original supine (on their back) position.
Electrical issues (28 percent). This hazard involved no
deaths and two reports of injuries.
Undetermined (8 percent). This hazard involved 28 deaths
and six injuries. Among the 28 deaths, staff was unable to determine
the product's role, but often unsafe sleep environment was cited as a
co-contributing condition to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).
Structural Integrity (6 percent). This hazard involved no
deaths and two injuries.
Insufficient information (4 percent). This hazard involved
eight deaths and six injuries. The reports did not provide information
on the circumstances of deaths and injuries involved unspecified falls.
Other Product-Related Issues (3 percent). This hazard
involved no deaths and nine injuries. The category includes reports of
instability (product tipping over) and inadequacy of restraints, and
most of the injuries involved falls.
Infant placement issues (1 percent). This hazard involved
four deaths and no injuries. Three of the four deaths involved infants
placed in a prone position.
Id. at 60952-53.
Since the 2019 SNPR, CPSC received a total of 71 new incident
reports related to inclined sleep products. While the distribution of
the data in this update varies somewhat, staff advises that the broader
hazard categories are very similar. The 71 new reports included 10
fatalities and 17 injuries. Of the 10 fatalities, three deaths involved
an infant who rolled from a supine position, one death involved an
overturned sleeper, one death involved an infant placed with a blanket,
and five deaths without reports containing information on the
circumstances of the death. Of the 17 injuries 12 involved design
issues, two involved structural integrity, and two involved unspecified
falls.
3. Assessment of ASTM Standards in Addressing Hazards
Below we summarize the hazard patterns associated with deaths and
injuries from all 522 incident reports related to inclined sleep
products CPSC received and reviewed since the 2017 NPR. CPSC did not
consider patterns, such as consumer comments, that did not involve
injuries or deaths. The 522 incidents involved 69 deaths and 113
injuries. We assesses the adequacy of the voluntary standard for infant
[[Page 33037]]
inclined sleep products (ASTM F3118) and the adequacy of the voluntary
standard for bassinets (ASTM F2194) in addressing hazards associated
with injuries and deaths.
In the 2019 SNPR, CPSC determined that the voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118-17a, is inadequate to
address the risk of injury associated with the incline of sleep
products, because the standard allows for products with a seatback
angle greater than 10 degrees. Id. at 60955-56. The majority of deaths
(in which the circumstances were known) were due to suffocation after
the infant rolled over in the product, and the same hazard pattern was
reported in nonfatal incidents. For the mandatory standard, CPSC
proposed to modify ASTM F3118-17a to limit the seatback angle for all
infant sleep products to 10 degrees or less, and to replace the
performance requirements with the performance requirements in 16 CFR
part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, which
incorporates by reference ASTM F2194-13 Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bassinets and Cradles, with modifications. With the
modifications in the mandatory standard, the standard is substantially
similar to ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, which we use for the assessment here.
(a) Hazard: Design Issues
When combining the data from the 2019 SNPR with new incident data
received since the SNPR, the ``design issues'' hazard is associated
with 22 deaths and 83 injuries. At least 20 deaths involved infants
rolling into a prone position (face down) and suffocating. More than
one-third of the incidents also reported that infants rolled over--
fully or partially--from their original supine (on their back)
position.
In the 2019 SNPR, we concluded that a flat sleeping surface that
does not exceed 10 degrees from horizontal offers infants the safest
sleep environment. This conclusion was based on findings from the
Mannen Study. 84 FR at 60955-56. Although some comments to the 2019
SNPR stated that more testing should be done to determine if the
maximum angle for safe sleep may be between 10 degrees to 20 degrees,
the Mannen Study suggested if future work were done on safe sleep
angles, one area of study would be additional biomechanical testing to
determine ``which, if any, angles between 10- and 20-degrees may be
safe for infant sleep.''
The Mannen Study recommendations do not imply that an incline angle
between 10 and 20 degrees may be safe for infant sleep, merely that if
higher angles are considered, additional biomechanical testing is
required. The Mannen Study also stated that its testing of awake
infants was a limitation because ``while the muscle use and motion may
be similar, it is likely that infants who find themselves in a
compromised position in an inclined sleep product during a nap or
overnight sleep may not have enough energy or alertness to achieve
self-correction and may succumb to suffocation earlier or more easily
than infants who are fully awake.''
Given the vulnerability of newborn infants and infant fatalities
who were most likely asleep at the time of incidents in inclined
products, we conclude that additional research of inclines above 10
degrees is unnecessary for the final rule. Based on the biomechanical
results of the Mannen Study, and its conclusion that 10 degrees is
likely a safe incline for infant sleep, which supports the 10 degrees
stated in the scope of ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, the Commission concludes
that 10 degrees is the maximum sleep surface angle that should be
allowed for any product intended for infant sleep for young infants up
to 5 months old. Additionally, other research \33\ has demonstrated a
discernable difference in infant ability between 5, 7, and 10 degrees
in a side-to-side tilt, which formed the basis of the 7-degree maximum
sleep surface angle in Health Canada's regulations. Staff advises that
additional research at angles higher than 10 degrees is unlikely to
alter their assessment that 10 degrees is the maximum safe incline for
infant sleep.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Beal SM, Moore L, Collett M, Montgomery B, Sprod C, Beal A.
The danger of freely rocking cradles. J Paediatr Child Health. 1995
Feb;31(1):38-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1754.1995.tb02910.x. PMID:
7748688.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The current voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep products,
ASTM F3118-17a, defines an ``inclined sleep product,'' in part, as
having a seatback angle greater than 10 degrees and not exceeding 30
degrees. Based on the Mannen Study and the other factors discussed
above, we conclude that ASTM F3118-17a does not adequately address the
risk of injury related to a sleep surface incline greater than 10
degrees, because the voluntary standard does not limit the sleep
surface to a safe incline angle. In comparison, the voluntary standard
for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, defines a sleep surface as being
less than or equal to 10 degrees, and includes performance requirements
for mattress flatness that limit measured angles to 10 degrees or
less.\34\ Therefore, for the mandatory standard specified in this final
rule, with respect to sleep surfaces, all infant sleep products,
including inclined sleep products, must meet the more stringent sleep
surface angle requirement of the voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1, as codified in 16 CFR part 1218, to further reduce the
risk of death from suffocation.
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\34\ In the final rule for bassinets, the Commission stated they
intended to limit the scope of the bassinet standard to exclude all
inclined products ``when the incline is more than 10 degrees from
horizontal.'' 78 FR 63,021.
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(b) Hazard: Undetermined Product Issue
This hazard category is associated with 28 deaths and six injuries.
Among the 28 deaths and six injuries, staff was unable to determine the
product's role. Without information on the product's role in deaths or
injuries, we are unable to assess whether the voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep, ASTM F3118-17a, or the voluntary standard for
bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, would adequately address the hazards in
this category.
(c) Hazard: Insufficient Information
This hazard category is associated with 13 deaths and eight
injuries. The reports did not provide information on the circumstances
of deaths and injury reports involving unspecified falls. Without
information on the circumstances of deaths or injuries, staff is unable
to assess if the voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep, ASTM
F3118-17a, or the voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1, would adequately address the hazards in this category. Falls
are discussed in more detail in ``Other Product-Related Issues,''
below.
(d) Hazard: Infant Placement
This hazard category is associated with five deaths and no
injuries. Three of the deaths involved infants placed in a prone
position, and one death involved an infant placed in a supine position
with a blanket covering the face. Based on the Mannen study, sleep
surfaces with a 20-degree incline significantly increased the demand on
abdominal muscles and could lead to increased fatigue and suffocation
if an infant is unable to reposition themselves after rolling from a
supine to prone position. In three of the deaths in this hazard
category, the infant was placed in the prone position and the inclined
sleep surface may have contributed to suffocation if the angle of the
sleep surface led to fatigue that prevented the infant from rolling to
a supine position.
[[Page 33038]]
While infants can die in flat products when placed to sleep in the
prone position, based on the Mannen Study, an inclined surface could
further contribute to deaths in the prone position. A sleep surface
limited to a 10-degree or less incline, as required in the bassinet
standard (ASTM F2194-16[egr]1), could reduce the risk of injury
associated with the prone position, when compared to an inclined sleep
product. Therefore, with respect to sleep surfaces, for the mandatory
rule, all infant sleep products, including inclined sleep products,
must meet the more stringent sleep surface angle requirement of the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, as set forth in
16 CFR part 1218, to further reduce the risk of death from suffocation.
(e) Hazard: Other Product-Related Issues (Instability, Restraints,
etc.)
This hazard category includes reports of instability (product
tipping over) and containment; the category is associated with one
death and nine injuries. One death occurred when a foam-type reclined
product tipped over and fell from the adult bed to the floor, trapping
the infant underneath. Most of the injuries involved falls and at least
10 reports (with no injury reported) related to nearly or completely
flipped over products.
The death, and most likely the injuries, relate to the stability of
the product and how easy it is to tip the product over into a hazardous
situation. The voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep products,
ASTM F3118-17a, includes two stability performance requirements that
apply to ``Compact Inclined Sleep Products'' and ``Infant or Newborn
Inclined Sleep Products.'' For the ``Compact Inclined Sleep Products,''
the product must remain upright when placed on a 20-degree inclined
test platform. For the ``Infant or Newborn Inclined Sleep Products,'' a
23-lb. vertical force and 5-lb. horizontal force are applied to the
product's side with a newborn CAMI dummy occupant to simulate an older
sibling pulling up on the side to view the infant in the bassinet, and
the product must remain upright containing the CAMI dummy. The
``Compact Inclined Sleep Products'' are exempt from the 23- and 5-pound
force requirements, with the rationale that the compact products are
intended to sit on a floor and are unlikely to have an older sibling
attempt to pull up to see the infant inside.
The current voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1,
includes an identical stability requirement that applies a 23-lb.
vertical force and a 5-lb. horizontal force to the product with a
newborn CAMI dummy occupant, and this requirement applies to all
products; it does not provide exemptions for ``Compact Inclined Sleep
Products'' to meet only the less stringent 20-degree inclined test
platform test. The rationale in ASTM F2194 states the dual application
of forces simulates a 2-year-old male pulling on the side of the
product; staff advises that sibling interaction is a reasonable
scenario which may cause the product to tip over. Due to the
portability of some of the unregulated compact sleep products, incident
data confirm that the products are used on raised surfaces from which
infants and product may fall. Therefore, regarding the product's
stability, in the final rule, all infant sleep products, including
inclined products, must meet the more stringent stability requirement
of the voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, as
codified in 16 CFR part 1218, to further reduce the risk of injury from
tip over of the product.
(f) Hazard: Structural Integrity
This hazard category includes reports of some component failures on
the product such as buckles/straps, hardware coming loose, hub/rail/leg
coming loose, or other unspecified components breaking. This hazard
category involved no deaths and four injuries. All injuries were
related to falls, and include one hospitalization and three emergency
department visits.
The voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep products, ASTM
F3118-17a, includes performance requirements to assess the integrity of
inclined sleep products. The requirements specify a dynamic test in
which an 18-lb. load, consisting of a 6- to 8-inch steel shot bag, is
dropped 50 times from a height of 1.0 inch onto the seat surface. The
requirements also specify a static test in which a 50-lb. load or three
times the product's maximum recommended weight, whichever is greater,
is gradually applied through a 6-inch square wooden block to the seat
surface for 60 seconds. The current voluntary standard for bassinets,
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, has a performance requirement to address
structural integrity that specifies a static load test that applies a
54-lb. load or three times the manufacturer's recommended weight,
whichever is greater, through a 6-inch aluminum block to the sleep
surface for 60 seconds. The rationale in ASTM F2194 states 54 lbs. is
three times the weight of the 95th percentile of a 3- to 5-month-old
infant.
Although the voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep products,
ASTM F3118-17a, requires a dynamic test for structural integrity, its
effectiveness in evaluating the product's strength is minimal, compared
to the static test. The load in the dynamic test being one-third of the
static load, the low drop height, short test timeframe, and presence of
energy-absorbing material (shot bag and flexible product material),
combine to minimize the effect of this test on the product's structural
integrity. In contrast, the static test applies a much larger load,
three times the heaviest infant in the product, with a rigid applicator
applied continuously for 60 seconds. Therefore, staff advises that the
static test is the more stringent evaluator of product integrity than
the dynamic test.
The static load in ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 is 54 lbs., which is a more
stringent load compared to the static load of 50 lbs. in ASTM F3118-
17a. Therefore, to further reduce the risk of injury associated with
structural defects, for the final rule, the Commission concludes that
the static load test in ASTM F2194 is adequate to assess structural
integrity of infant sleep products, and is more stringent than the
static load test in ASTM F3118-17a. The final rule requires that all
infant sleep products, including inclined sleep products, meet the more
stringent structural integrity requirement of the voluntary standard
for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, as codified in 16 CFR part 1218.
(g) Hazard: Electrical Issues
This hazard category involved no deaths and two reports of injuries
related to electric shock. Non-injury incidents reported overheating/
melting of components and issues with batteries. As noted in the 2019
SNPR, the infant inclined sleep products standard, ASTM F3118-17a, does
not include any performance requirements for electrical components. 84
FR at 60956. The voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1,
also does not address electrical hazards. However, CPSC staff advises
that they raised this issue with ASTM, and that the ASTM Ad Hoc task
group is developing performance requirements to address electrical
hazards across juvenile products. As these electrical requirements are
added during the ASTM voluntary standard updates, CPSC can review the
updated voluntary standard pursuant to the update provision in Public
Law 112-28, and determine whether to revise the mandatory standard
based on a revised voluntary standard.
[[Page 33039]]
4. Assessment of International Standards
(a) EN1466:2014 Carry Cots
The BS EN 1466:2014 Child use and care articles--Carry cots and
stands--Safety requirements and test methods European standard applies
to products intended for carrying a child in a lying position using a
handle or stand. This standard applies to children who cannot sit
unaided or roll over or push up on their hands and knees and is a
maximum weight of 19.84 pounds.
i. Side Height
For cots on a stand, EN 1466:2014 standard requires an internal
height of at least 7.87 inches (200 mm) from the top of a mattress,
compressed by a 19.84-pound (9kg) steel plate, to the lowest point of
the upper edge of the sides. For carry cots not on a stand, the
standard requires an internal height 5.9 inches (150mm) to 7.09 inches
(180mm), depending on the length of the cot, using the same test
method. This requirement measures the internal side height when an
occupant of the maximum weight compresses the mattress. This standard
has a side height requirement similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinet standard, which requires a minimum side height of 7.5 inches
from an uncompressed mattress. For bassinets on a stand, if the
mattress compresses more than \3/8\ of an inch, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
requires a higher side. For bassinets not on a stand, ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 has a higher side height of 7.5 inches from an uncompressed
mattress, compared to the EN 1466:2014 requirement, which is 7.09
inches from a compressed mattress. Additionally, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
requires a consistent side height no matter the configuration.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The EN 1466:2014 standard requires a maximum sleep surface angle of
10 degrees. This requirement is similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinet standard, which requires a maximum sleep surface angle of 10
degrees.
iii. Latching Requirements
The EN 1466:2014 standard requires products with a folding stand
mechanism not to collapse after the latch is operated (closed and
opened) 300 times, and after a 44.96 pound-force (200N) is applied in
the area of the stand most likely to cause the product to fold. The EN
1466:2014 standard's latching requirement only simulates the action of
unintentionally folding the stand without the carry cot or box
assembled on the stand. In contrast, the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet
standard tests both the stand and the bassinet as a fully assembled
product.
The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard requires products without
a latching or locking device not to fold when a 20 pound-force is
applied to the top edge of the bassinet in the direction most likely to
cause it to fold. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard requires a
lower force than the EN standard, but the force is applied at a higher
location (top side of the bassinet) than the EN standard (force applied
to the stand). The higher location of the force can create a higher
torque at the latch due to the longer lever arm. For bassinets with a
locking hinge or latch, the locking mechanism must withstand a 10-pound
force in the direction most likely to release it. Determining which
latching requirement is more stringent is difficult because the test
parameters are not directly comparable. Staff assesses that testing the
product fully assembled, as required by ASTM, is a better test because
it simulates realistic use of the product.
The ASTM standard also includes a Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment
to Base/Stand requirement and testing to address latching and locking
devices intended to secure removable bassinet beds to the base/stand.
These requirements and test are unique because they address known
incidents of false latching of a removable bassinet bed. By considering
the latching, unintentional folding, and bassinet bed attachments to
the stand requirements in total, staff assesses that the ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 bassinet standard's latching requirements are adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The EN1466:2014 standard requires products with an occupant test
mass of 15.43 pounds not to tip over when placed on a 20-degree
surface. EN1466:2014 rationalizes this test by stating: ``Carry cots
shall be designed so that they do not tip over when they are placed on
slightly sloping ground or when the child leans against one side of the
carry cot.'' This is different compared to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinet standard that requires the product (with simulated newborn
occupant) to withstand a 23-lb. vertical force and 5-lb. horizontal
force along its side, without tipping. The rationale in ASTM F2194
states the dual application of forces simulates a 2-year-old male
pulling on the side of the product; staff advises that this is a
reasonable scenario in which the product may tip over. Determining
which stability requirement is more stringent is difficult, because
both standards' torque arms depend upon the product's geometry. Using a
10-inch wide by 10-inch tall sidewall box on a 10-inch stand as a
reference product for comparison, staff determined the reference
product would fail the ASTM F2194 bassinet standard's test and pass the
EN 1466 standard's test. Therefore, staff assesses that the ASTM 2194-
16[egr]1 bassinet standard's stability requirement is more stringent
for this reference product.
v. EN1466:2014 Summary
The EN 1466:2014 carry cots standard has a side height and sleep
surface angle requirement similar to ASTM F2194- 16[egr]1's bassinet
standard. However, the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 standard has a potentially
more stringent stability requirement.
(b) EN 1130:2019 Children's Cribs and Cradles
The European Standard, EN 1130-1: 2019 ``Furniture--Cribs and
Cradles for Domestic Use'' has several requirements not found in ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1. Most of these additional requirements address hazards
associated with cribs intended for use with older children (in excess
of the 5-month recommended maximum age for bassinets); and thus, these
requirements are not applicable to bassinets.
i. Side Height
The EN 1130:2019 standard requires a side height of at least 7.87
inches (200 mm) when a 19.84-pound (9kg) steel plate is placed on the
compressed mattress. This measures the crib's internal side height with
a 19.84-pound occupant is compressing the mattress. This standard has a
side height requirement similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet
standard, which requires a minimum side height of 7.5 inches from an
uncompressed mattress. If the mattress compresses more than \3/8\ of an
inch, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 requires a higher side.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The EN 1130:2019 standard requires a maximum sleep surface angle of
10 degrees. This standard has a sleep surface angle requirement similar
to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard, which requires a maximum
sleep surface angle of 10 degrees.
iii. Latching Requirements
The EN 1130:2019 standard requires folding products to contain a
dual-action locking mechanism, and to unlock with a tool, and to fold
only when the crib is lifted, or not collapse after the latch is
operated (closed and
[[Page 33040]]
opened) 300 times, and at least an 11.24-pound force (50N) is required
to unlock it. The EN 1130:2019 standard's latching requirement only
simulates the action of unintentionally folding the product's folding
or adjustable legs, while the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard
tests both the standard and the bassinet as a fully assembled product.
The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard requires products without
a locking mechanism to withstand a 20-pound force applied to the top
edge of the bassinet in the direction most likely to cause it to fold.
For products with a locking hinge or latch, the locking mechanism must
withstand a 10-pound force in the direction most likely to release it.
Staff's assessment is that testing the product fully assembled, as
required by ASTM, is a better test because it simulates realistic use
of the product.
The ASTM standard also includes a Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment
to Base/Stand requirement and testing to address latching and locking
devices intended to secure removable bassinet beds to the base/stand.
These requirements and the test are unique because they address known
incidents of false latching of a removable bassinet bed. By considering
the latching, unintentional folding, and bassinet bed attachments to
the stand requirements in total, staff assesses that the ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 bassinet standard's latching requirements are adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The EN1330:2019 standard requires products not to tip over when a
19.87-pound weight is placed on one side of the crib, while on the
opposite side's top rail, a 6.74 pound-force is horizontally applied
towards the weight. This test is similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinet standard with reasonably similar forces. EN1330:2019
rationalizes the test, stating the product ``should remain stable when
the child moves in the crib or when the crib swings along the amplitude
permitted by the suspension device.'' ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 is based on
U.S. incident data of a 2-year-old sibling pulling over a bassinet,
which is a more severe condition than an infant moving within the
product. Therefore, staff concludes the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet
standard's stability requirements are adequate.
v. EN 1130:2019 Summary
The EN 1130:2019 children's cribs and cradle standard has side
height, sleep surface angle, and stability requirements similar to the
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard; however, the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
standard has a more extensive and stringent latching requirement.
(c) AS/NZS 4385:1996 Infant's Rocking Cradles
The Australian/New Zealand standard (AS/NZS 4385:1996) contains
requirements for rocking and swinging angles used to develop some of
the ASTM F2194-12 requirements. The ASTM rock/swing rest angle
performance requirement is more stringent because the occupant
surrogate, a CAMI dummy, is placed against the sidewall, resulting in
higher rest angles.
i. Side Height
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard requires a minimum side height of
11.81 inches (300 mm) between the top of the mattress support to the
top edge of the lowest rocking cradle's side. The maximum mattress
thickness the AS/NZS standard permits is 2.95 inches (75mm). Therefore,
the minimum side height between the top of the mattress and the top
edge of the lowest side is 8.85 inches. This is similar to the ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard, which requires a minimum side height
of 7.5 inches between the top of the mattress and the top of the lowest
sidewall.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard requires the mattress angle on
rocking cradles without a self-leveling device not to exceed 5 degrees
and 10 degrees on rocking cradles with a self-leveling device. This is
similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard, which requires a
maximum sleep surface angle of 10 degrees.
iii. Latching Requirements
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard does not contain any latching
requirements to address the unintentional folding hazard. The ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard is more stringent because it requires
products without a locking mechanism to withstand a 20-pound force
without folding, or a 10-pound force for hinges with locking
mechanisms. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 also addresses the false latching
of a removable bassinet bed with requirements including an automatic
locking latch or a false latch indicator.
iv. Stability Requirements
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 standard requires a product not to tip over
when a 19.84-pound (9 kg) weight is on the mattress and a 4.49-pound
force (20N) is applied horizontally to the uppermost rail. This test is
similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard, which requires
the product (with simulated newborn occupant) to withstand a 23-pound
vertical force and 5-lb. horizontal force along its side, without
tipping. The rationale in ASTM F2194 states the dual application of
forces simulates a 2-year-old male pulling on the side of the product;
staff concludes that this is a reasonable scenario in which the product
may tip over.
v. AS/NZS 4385:1996 Summary
The AS/NZS 4385:1996 infant's rocking cradle standard has a side
height, sleep surface angle, and stability requirement similar to the
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard. However, the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinet standard has a more stringent latching requirement.
(d) Canadian Standard (SOR/2016-152) Cribs, Cradles, and Bassinets
The Canadian standard (SOR/2016-152) includes requirements for
cribs, cradles, and bassinets. Staff focused their analysis on the
requirements for ``bassinets,'' which are defined as providing sleeping
accommodations for a child with sides to confine the child, and a sleep
surface area less than or equal to 4000 cm\2\ (620 in\2\).
i. Side Height
The Canadian standard requires a minimum side height of 230 mm
(9.05 inches), measured from the mattress support. Because ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 allows a bassinet mattress of 1.5 inches, measuring from the
upper surface of the mattress support to the upper surface of the side
would be 1.5 inches greater than measuring from the upper surface of an
uncompressed mattress. Therefore, staff advises that the 7.5-inch side
height, from the upper surface of an uncompressed mattress, is
functionally equivalent to the 9-inch side height, measured from the
upper surface of the mattress support in the Canadian standard.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The Canadian standard requires the sleep surface angle not to
exceed 7 degrees, which is based on a 1995 study that demonstrated a
discernable difference in infant ability between 5, 7, and 10 degrees
in a side-to-side tilt. Staff advises they understand that Health
Canada selected 7 degrees and applied it to all sides of the product,
regardless of head-to-toe or side-to-side tilt. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinets standard allows for a side-to-side resting angle of 7 degrees
for rocking cradles, and limits head-to-toe angle to 10 degrees. As
discussed in section
[[Page 33041]]
VI.A.3(a) of this preamble, based on the Mannen Study and other
factors, the Commission concludes that a flat sleeping surface that
does not exceed 10 degrees from horizontal offers infants the safest
sleep environment.
iii. Latching Requirements
The Canadian standard requires folding products to contain an auto-
locking mechanism that requires a dual-simultaneous action to disengage
and that does not fold when a 52.91-pound (24kg) load is applied on any
area most likely to damage the mattress support. While the Canadian
standard requires an auto-locking mechanism that requires a dual-
simultaneous action to disengage, it also tests the latching strength
by loading the mattress support. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet
standard requires that products without a latching or locking device
not fold when a 20-pound force is applied to the top edge of the
bassinet in the direction most likely to cause it to fold. The ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard requires a lower force than the
Canadian standard, but the force is applied at a higher location (top
side of the bassinet) than the Canadian standard (force applied to the
mattress support). The higher location of the force could create a
greater torque at the latch, due to the longer lever arm. For bassinets
with a locking hinge or latch, the locking mechanism must withstand a
10-pound force in the direction most likely to release it. Determining
which latching requirement is more stringent is difficult because the
test parameters are not directly comparable.
The ASTM standard also includes a Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment
to Base/Stand requirement and testing to address latching and locking
devices intended to secure removable bassinet beds to the base/stand.
These requirements and test are unique because they address known
incidents of false latching of a removable bassinet bed. By considering
the latching, unintentional folding, and bassinet bed attachments to
the stand requirements in total, staff assesses that the ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 bassinet standard's latching requirements are adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The Canadian requirement in Schedule 11, Test for Stability of
Cradles, Bassinets, and Stands, of their regulation is substantially
equivalent to the requirement in ASTM F2194-16[egr]1. The requirement
specifies that the product (with a simulated newborn occupant) must
withstand a 10-kg (approximately 22 pounds) static vertical load over a
period of 5 seconds and a 22 N (approximately 4.9 pounds) horizontal
force, without tipping. Staff advises that this test evaluates the same
stability hazard and is substantially equivalent to the ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 bassinets standard, differing slightly due to conversions to
metric.
v. SOR/2016-152 Summary
The Canadian standard has a side height and stability requirement
similar to the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard. While the
Canadian standard has a more stringent sleep surface angle requirement,
the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard has a more extensive latching
requirement. Staff concludes that the requirements in the ASTM standard
are adequate to address the risk of injury demonstrated in the incident
data.
B. Flat Sleep Products \35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Tab C of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package contains CPSC
staff's assessment of the adequacy of ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 to address
incidents associated with flat sleep products.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CPSC received public comments on the 2019 SNPR regarding the safety
of currently unregulated flat infant sleep products available in the
marketplace. In response, for the final rule CPSC staff completed a
review of CPSC's epidemiological databases, CPSRMS and NEISS. CPSC
received a total of 183 incident reports from January 1, 2019 through
December 30, 2020, related to flat sleep products available in the
marketplace that are currently not under the purview of any mandatory
or voluntary standard that addresses sleep hazards. These flat sleep
products include: In-bed sleepers, baskets (that can function as hand-
held carriers as well), baby boxes, compact bassinets, most of which
are portable for travel, and travel tents. All of these unregulated
sleep products are flat (sleep surface has no incline) and most come
with mattress pads (with the exception of some baby travel tents).
Based on the following analysis, the Commission determines that the
performance and labeling requirements of the voluntary standard for
bassinets and cradles, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, as codified in 16 CFR part
1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, are adequate to
address the risk of injury associated with flat infant sleep products,
and furthermore, finds that requiring flat products to conform to these
requirements would also further reduce the risk of injury associated
with flat sleep products.
1. Hazard Pattern Categories
Of the 183 reported incidents, 11 are fatalities; among the
remaining 172 nonfatal incidents, 16 reported an injury. Seven of the
11 fatalities involved suffocation. We identified six hazards related
to the risk of injury or death (we did not consider patterns that did
not relate to injuries or deaths, such as consumer comments). The
hazard patterns identified among the 183 incidents are: Lock/latch
problems, falls/containment issues, instability, asphyxiation/
suffocation, product-related issues, and undetermined causes.
Engineering staff analyzed whether the voluntary standard for
bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, would address the identified hazards
for flat sleep products. The voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1, is more applicable to these flat products than ASTM
F3118-17a, because these products have a sleep surface less than 10
degrees, and because, as set forth below, the standard addresses the
identified hazards associated with these products. The current
voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118-17a,
is not applicable to these flat sleep surface products, and it does not
address hazards associated with flat sleep surfaces.
In the 2019 SNPR, the Commission proposed expanding the scope of
ASTM F3118-17a for the mandatory rule, to include all infant sleep
products (inclined and flat) that are not covered by another CPSC sleep
standard, including the bassinets, cribs (full-size and non-full size),
play yards, or bedside sleepers standards. The 2019 SNPR proposed to
require that all products marketed or intended for infant sleep have a
seatback angle of 10 degrees or less, and meet 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, which includes the performance
requirements of ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets. The following are the
identified hazards for flat sleep products are discussed below.
(a) Hazard: Lock/Latch Issue
One hundred fifteen of the 183 incidents, and no deaths, were
related to latches that control the opening/closing of the cover on the
product failed. Although these latch incidents did not relate to a
product folding or collapsing, they illustrate, nevertheless, that
these products have latch failures. From analyses on other products,
staff is aware that failure of a product's latch can cause the product
to fold or collapse unintentionally and pose a suffocation hazard to
the infant. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard addresses
hazards posed by a lock/latch failure with an unintentional folding
[[Page 33042]]
requirement. The requirement specifies that if a folding product does
not have a latching or locking device, then it shall not fold when a
20-lb. force is applied in the direction most likely to fold the
product (with simulated infant occupant). The requirement also
specifies if a folding product does have a single-action latch, then it
shall not fold when a 10-lb. force is applied in the direction most
likely to fold the product. Staff assesses that this requirement
adequately simulates the action of unintentionally folding the product,
and therefore, to address this risk of injury, we conclude that all
flat sleep products with a lock or latch should at least meet the ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard's unintentional folding requirement.
The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard also includes a
``Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment to Base/Stand'' performance
requirement. A removable bassinet bed attaches to the bassinet stand
and is secured with a latch/lock. This requirement states a removable
bassinet bed shall:
Not be supported by the bassinet stand in an unlocked/latched
configuration;
automatically lock to the bassinet stand and can't be placed
in an unlocked position on the bassinet stand;
clearly and obviously be unstable when the product is
unlocked/latched by placing the sleeping surface at a 20-degree
incline;
have a false latch/lock visual indicator designed to visually
alert caregivers when the bed is not properly locked to the stand; or
have a lock/latch mechanism that is not needed to pass the
stability requirement.
The purpose of this requirement is to ensure that bassinets that
can be removed from their stand are securely latched to the stand when
in use. Staff assesses that the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets
standard's requirement adequately simulates the action of a bassinet
unintentionally unlatching from its stand. Staff also assesses that the
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard's requirement is more stringent
compared to the ASTM F3118-17a infant inclined sleep products standard,
which lacks a requirement for products that can be removed from a
stand. Therefore, the final rule requires that flat sleep products meet
the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard's ``unintentional folding
requirement'' and the ``Removable Bassinet Bed Attachment to Base/Stand
requirement,'' if applicable, to address the risk of injury associated
with locks and latching features on these products.
(b) Hazard: Falls/Containment Issue
Twelve of the 183 incidents were related to falls or an infant
otherwise not being kept contained within the product. Of the 12
incidents, one resulted in a death, one required hospital admission,
and nine required ED visits. Failure to contain occupants in an infant
sleep product can lead to infants falling or climbing out of the infant
sleep product into a hazardous area.
Typically, regulated sleep products do not allow an active occupant
restraint system for occupant containment. Active restraint systems are
only effective when the caregiver actively uses them and adjusts them
correctly; however, in a sleep environment, active restraints can
create an entanglement and asphyxiation hazard.
The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard does not allow the use
of restraints, and instead addresses containment-related hazards posed
with a side height requirement, a passive safety feature. The
requirement specifies that the product's interior side height with an
uncompressed mattress shall be at least 7.5 inches.
In 2012, the ASTM F2194-12 bassinets standard first required a
minimum 7.5-inch side height based on the Canadian standard.\36\ The
side height is measured from the upper surface of the uncompressed
mattress to the upper surface of the lowest side. This requirement
remains in effect in the most recent version of the bassinets standard,
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1. Canada requires a side height of 230 mm (9
inches), measured from the mattress support. Because ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1 allows a bassinet mattress of 1.5 inches, measuring from the
upper surface of the mattress support, which is underneath the
mattress, to the upper surface of the side would be 1.5 inches greater
than measuring from the upper surface of an uncompressed mattress.
Therefore, staff assesses that the 7.5-inch side height, from the upper
surface of an uncompressed mattress is functionally equivalent to the
9-inch side height, measured from the upper surface of the mattress
support in Canada.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 78 FR 63,109 (Oct. 23, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Products that CPSC staff identified as flat sleep products are not
currently subject to a voluntary or mandatory standard that specifies a
minimum side height. Flat sleep products that are considered hand-held
carriers under 16 CFR part 1225, Safety Standard for Hand-Held Infant
Carriers, and ASTM F2050-19, Standard Consumer Safety
Speci[filig]cation for Hand-Held Infant Carriers, can be defined as a
``hand-held bassinet/cradle'' product intended for sleep, but ``hand-
held bassinet/cradles'' are not subject to a side height requirement in
the mandatory or voluntary standard. Products without a minimum side
height could fail to contain occupants, which can lead to infants
falling or climbing out of the product into a hazardous area.
Table 4 shows the side height requirements for each sleep product
standard. Sleep products that have a minimum side height requirement
range from 2-inches for the voluntary standard for infant inclined
sleep products, to 9-inches for cribs. Bassinets, bedside sleepers, and
infant inclined sleep products are intended for infants from birth to
5-months old. Cribs are intended for newborns up to children 35-inches
tall, which is equivalent to a 95th percentile in stature 21-month-old.
Table 4--Side Height Requirements for Sleep Products
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Side height
Standard requirement Age range
------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 CFR 1218--Safety Standard for 7.5 inches........ 0-5 months, or sit
Bassinets and Cradles. up.
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification
for Bassinets and Cradles..
16 CFR 1219--Safety Standard for 9 inches.......... 0-35 inches tall
Full-Size Baby Cribs. (95th percentile
ASTM F1169-19, Standard Consumer 21-month old).
Safety Specification for Full-
Size Baby Cribs..
[[Page 33043]]
16 CFR 1220--Safety Standards 9 inches.......... 0-35 inches tall
for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs. (95th percentile
16 CFR 1221--Safety Standards 21-month old).
for Play Yards..
ASTM F 406-19, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Non-
Full-Size Baby Cribs/Play
Yards..
16 CFR 1222--Safety Standard for 4 inches on side 0-5 months, or sit
Bedside Sleepers. next to adult up.
ASTM F2906-13, Standard Consumer bed. 7.5 inches
Safety Specification for for other 3 sides.
Bedside Sleepers..
ASTM F3118-17a, Standard 3 inches.......... 0-5 months, or sit
Consumer Safety Specification 2 inches.......... up.
for Infant Inclined Sleep 0-3 months.
Products.
16 CFR part 1225 Safety Standard No requirements...
for Hand-Held Infant Carrier.
ASTM F2050-19 Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Hand-
Held Infant Carrier..
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Inclined sleep products covered in ASTM F3118-17a can meet the
standard with a minimum side height of 3-inches, for products intended
for newborns, to 5-month of age and a minimum side height of 2-inches,
for products intended for newborns up to 3-months old.
Upon review of applicable standards, CPSC staff determined that the
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard's 7.5-inch side height
requirement provided the greatest safety for the intended use for
newborns to 5-months of age. Staff assesses that the minimum side
height requirement of 2-inches and 3-inches in ASTM F3118-17a is
inadequate to address the incidents of infants failing to be contained
in low-sided products, and the 3-inch side height is lower than the
center of gravity of a 5-month-old infant on its side. Staff determined
that because most flat sleep products are intended for infants under 5
months, who cannot sit upright unassisted, the side height requirement
in ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 is adequate to address containment incidents.
Based on staff's analysis, the Commission determines that flat sleep
products with no side height requirements pose a potential fall hazard,
as reflected in the incident data.
Staff's analysis demonstrates that the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinets standard's 7.5-inch side height requirement is appropriate
and would adequately address the falls/containment hazard in flat sleep
products for infants up to 5 months old or who cannot sit up
unassisted. Therefore, consistent with the 2019 SNPR, the final rule
requires that all infant sleep products, inclined and flat, meet the
side height requirement of the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard,
as provided in 16 CFR part 1218, to address fall/containment hazards.
(c) Hazard: Instability
Twelve of the 183 incidents were related to the instability of the
product. An unstable product can lead to tip-over incidents. Of the 12
incidents, two resulted in injuries, one involved an ED visit. The data
summarized in Tab B of the Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package includes
at least one incident in a small, portable infant sleep product
involving a sibling interaction resulting in a fall. Specifically, the
NEISS report states: ``7WKOF WITH HEAD INJURY, FELL FROM PORTABLE
BASSINET THAT WAS ON COUCH, APPROX 1.5FT, YOUNGER BROTHER PULLED THE
BASSINET AND IT FLIPPED ONTO THE PLAYMAT, PT LANDED ON RT SIDE OF
HEAD.'' This sibling interaction-type incident is addressed by the
bassinet standard, as discussed below.
Unregulated flat sleep products are not required to have a stand.
Therefore, these products can be placed directly on the floor or on
potentially hazardous or unstable elevated surfaces, such as tables,
countertops, soft mattresses, or couches. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
bassinets standard addresses this hazard scenario by requiring
bassinets to have a stand/base/frame. ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 defines a
``bassinet'' as a small bed ``supported by free standing legs, a
stationary frame/stand, a wheeled base, a rocking base, or which can
swing relative to a stationary base.'' This requirement to have a
stand, and be raised off the floor, increases the stability of a
portable product by discouraging or preventing use of the product on
other, less stable, surfaces, such as elevated surfaces or soft
surfaces (couches and adult beds). Therefore, with respect to this
hazard scenario, and as proposed in the 2019 SNPR, the final rule
requires that all infant sleep products, flat and inclined, meet the
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard's requirements, including
requiring products to have a stand, to further reduce the risk of
injury from a product placed on a hazardous elevated surface or an
unstable surface, such as a couch or adult bed. This requirement in the
final rule is codified by requiring products to meet the definitional
requirement of a ``bassinet/cradle.''
Additionally, the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard addresses
hazards posed by the product's instability with a stability
requirement. The requirement specifies that the product (with simulated
newborn occupant) withstand a 23-lb. vertical force and 5-lb.
horizontal force along its side, without tipping. The rationale in ASTM
F2194 states the dual application of forces simulates a 2-year-old male
pulling on the side of the product; staff assesses that this is a
reasonable scenario in which the product may tip over. Incident data
also demonstrate that these compact products are used on elevated
surfaces, such as beds and couches, from which the infant and product
fell. Therefore, with respect to the product's stability, the final
rule requires that all infant sleep products meet the stability
requirement of the voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1, as provided in 16 CFR part 1218, to further reduce the risk
of injury associated with product tip-over.
The Canadian requirement in Schedule 11, Test for Stability of
Cradles, Bassinets and Stands, of their regulation is substantially
equivalent to the requirement in ASTM F2194-16[egr]1. The requirement
specifies that the product (with a simulated newborn occupant)
withstand a 10-kg (approximately 22 pounds) static vertical load over a
period of 5 seconds and a 22 newton (approximately 4.9 pounds)
horizontal force without tipping. Staff advises that this test is
substantially equivalent to the ASTM test, differing slightly due to
conversions to metric.
(d) Hazard: Asphyxiation/Suffocation
Nine of the 183 incidents were related to infants that partially or
fully rolled over from their initial position in infant sleep products.
Of the nine incidents, eight resulted in a death, and one
[[Page 33044]]
resulted in a near-suffocation prevented by a nearby parent.
The voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1,
addresses the asphyxiation/suffocation hazard with the following
general/performance requirements:
5.10 Corner Posts: This requirement addresses corner post
extensions that can entangle ribbons, pacifier cords, necklaces, or
occupant clothing. Entanglement of any of these items could lead to the
asphyxiation of the occupant. This requirement limits the extension of
a bassinet's corner post from extending more than .06 inches above the
upper edge of an end or side panel. Corner posts that extend at least
16 inches above the top of a side rail are exempt because they are
deemed inaccessible to the occupant. These are the same requirements
found in the regulated ASTM F406-19 (non-full-sized cribs) and ASTM
F1169-19 (full-sized cribs) standards that CPSC staff previously
concluded adequately address the corner post entanglement hazard.
6.1 Spacing of Rigid-Sided Bassinet/Cradle Components.
This requirement limits the distance between slats to less than 2\3/8\
inches to mitigate the suffocation hazard from feet-first head
entrapment.
6.2 Openings for Mesh/Fabric-Sided Bassinets/Cradle. This
requirement tests openings in the bassinet's mesh for entrapment of
fingers, toes, and snaring buttons, often used on infant clothing. The
snaring of a button entraps the button and could lead to asphyxiation
as the infant becomes entangled and entrapped. In this performance
requirement, the mesh-sided bassinet's openings cannot allow a \1/4\-
inch rod to fit through.
6.5.3 Pad Dimensions. This requirement mitigates the
hazard of suffocating when entrapped in the space between the edge of
the mattress and the bassinet's sidewall, by limiting the available
space to less than 1 inch.
6.7 Bassinets with Segmented Mattress: Flatness Test. This
requirement limits sleep surface variability of a segmented or folding
mattress to 10 degrees or less. This angle was determined to reduce the
likelihood of an infant's face becoming engulfed by a small ``V'' shape
formed by the creases in a folded mattress, potentially present in a
bassinet that uses a folding play yard mattress as the bassinet
mattress.
6.8 Fabric-Sided Enclosed Openings. This requirement
addresses the hazard of a feet-first head entrapment through the
openings of fabric-sided bassinets. This requirement limits the
openings in a fabric-sided bassinet to prevent the 5th percentile 0 to
2-year-old torso probe from passing through. This requirement prevents
a child's torso from fitting through any openings in the fabric
sidewalls; therefore, staff concludes this requirement would prevent a
feet-first head entrapment.
6.9 Rock/Swing Angle. This requirement limits the
bassinet's sleeping surface angle to less than 20 degrees when rocked,
and seven degrees when the bassinet is at rest. In the 2019 SNPR, and
in this final rule, the Commission determined that a flat sleep surface
that does not exceed 10 degrees offers infants the safest sleep
environment. This conclusion is based on the Mannen Study.
In total, these requirements address known suffocation hazards with
infant sleep and create a minimally safe sleep environment. Therefore,
for the final rule, with respect to the asphyxiation/suffocation
hazard, we finalize the 2019 SNPR proposal, by requiring that all
infant sleep products meet general and performance requirements of the
voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, as provided in
16 CFR part 1218, to further reduce the risk of death from suffocation.
(e) Hazard: Product-Related Issues
Three of the 183 incidents were related to mold or quality of the
product material. Two of the three products were in-bed sleepers, while
the third was a compact bassinet/travel bed. All three reported an
injury. None of the voluntary standards currently address conditions
such as mold that manifest due to the conditions under which a product
is used. A moisture-resistant requirement has been discussed in the
ASTM task group for baby boxes (which is under the bassinet
subcommittee), but the task group has not reached a consensus on
appropriate performance requirements to address mold and moisture
resistance. CPSC staff will continue to work with this task group.
(f) Hazard: Undetermined Issues
Three of the 183 incidents did not have enough reported information
for us to determine the issue involved. Two of the incidents were
fatalities; in both cases, CPSC Field investigation reports indicate
that the cause of death is undetermined. The third incident resulted in
a hospitalization due to unspecified breathing difficulties suffered by
the infant. The reports did not provide sufficient information on the
circumstances of deaths, and injury reports involved unspecified falls.
Without information on the circumstances of deaths or injuries, we are
unable to assess whether the voluntary standard for bassinets, ASTM
F2194-16[egr]1, would adequately address the hazards in this category.
2. Assessment of International Standards
(a) EN12790:2009 Reclined Cradles
The scope of the European Standard, EN 12790-2009 ``Child use and
care articles--Reclined cradles'' includes inclined bassinets/cradles,
car seat carriers, hammocks, and bouncers. Some of the general
requirements could apply, but because the scope of the products that
fall within this standard is not the same as the final rule, most of
the requirements are not applicable to infant sleep products.
i. Side Height
The EN 12790:2009 standard does not have a side height requirement,
but it includes a three-point restraint to address the containment
hazard. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard is more stringent by
requiring a minimum side height of 7.5 inches. Restraints are an active
safety feature that might not always be used, while the side height
requirement is a passive safety feature.
ii. Sleep Surface Angle
The EN 12790:2009 standard requires a seatback angle between 10
degrees and 80 degrees, while the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard
is more stringent by requiring a maximum sleep surface angle of 10
degrees. The EN 12790:2009 standard was written for products that may
or may not be intended for sleep, such as car seats, a scope that is
broader than the scope of the ASTM bassinet standard. The Mannen Study
concluded that a seatback angle of 10 degrees or less is safe.
Accordingly, the sleep surface requirement in the final rule remains
consistent with the Mannen Study findings, and as already codified in
16 CFR part 1218.
iii. Latching Requirements
The EN 12790:2009 standard specifies that infant rocking cradles
must have at least one automatic locking latch mechanism, and that the
locking mechanisms:
Require 50N (11.24 pounds-force) to unlatch after
operating the latch 300 times;
Require a tool to unlatch;
Require two consecutive actions to unlatch; or
Require two independent and simultaneous actions to
unlatch.
The EN 12790:2009 standard's latching requirement simulates the
action of unintentionally folding the product. The ASTM F2194-16[egr]1
[[Page 33045]]
bassinets standard similarly includes requirements that address the
unintentional folding hazard and requirements that address the false
latching of a removable bassinet bed. Therefore, staff assesses that
the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard's latching requirements are
adequate.
iv. Stability Requirements
The EN 12790:2009 standard requires products with a test mass not
to tip over when placed on a 15-degree surface. The test mass for
cradles designed for occupants up to 13.22 pounds is 19.84 pounds. The
test mass for cradles designed for occupants up to 19.87 pounds is
33.06 pounds. This standard simulates the stability of an occupied
reclined cradle on an uneven surface. This is different compared to the
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard, which requires the product
(with simulated newborn occupant) to withstand a 23-lb. vertical force
and 5-lb. horizontal force along its side, without tipping. The
rationale in ASTM F2194 states the dual application of forces simulates
a 2-year-old male pulling on the side of the product; staff concludes
that this is a reasonable scenario in which the product may tip over.
v. EN 12790:2009 Summary
The EN 12790:2009 reclined cradle standard is less stringent than
the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets standard by not requiring any minimum
side height for containment and permits a more inclined sleep surface
angle for products that include reclined cradles and car seats for
children up to 19.84 pounds.
C. Applicability of ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 to Flat Sleep Product Hazards
Table 5 summarizes the hazards associated with flat sleep products
and how each hazard category is addressed by the voluntary standard for
bassinets, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1. Table 5 demonstrates that four hazard
categories (shaded) are addressed by ASTM F2194-16[egr]1: Latching,
Falls/Containment, Instability, and Asphyxiation/Suffocation.
Table 5--Flat Sleep Product Hazards Addressed by Bassinets Voluntary Standard
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Infant sleep hazards
Applicable --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Product voluntary Falls/ Asphyxiation/ Miscellaneous
standard Latching containment Instability suffocation product-related Undetermined
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Flat Sleep Products (flat and ................ 115 incidents: 12 incidents: 1 12 incidents: 2 9 incidents: 8 3 mold-related 3 incidents:
inclined). Not currently death. Not injuries. Not deaths; not incidents; not Two deaths.
addressed. currently currently currently currently Too little
addressed. addressed. addressed. addressed. information to
determine
addressability
.
Bassinet/Cradle.............. ASTM F2194- Unintentional Side height Stability Max sleep Not currently Too little
16[egr]1. folding requirement. requirement. surface angle addressed; information to
requirement. defined in task group determine
definition; work. addressability
Restraints not .
allowed;
Flatness/
hazardous Vs
identified;
Pad
dimensions;
Corner posts;
fabric sided
enclosed
openings;
Spacing; Mesh
openings.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this assessment of the hazards associated with flat sleep
products, and consistent with the 2019 SNPR, the final rule requires
that all infant sleep products not already regulated by a CPSC sleep
standard meet the requirements in the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinets
standard, as provided in 16 CFR part 1218, to address the risk of
injury associated with these sleep products. Specifically, the final
rule requires that infant sleep products, meaning products that are
marketed or intended as a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not subject to a CPSC sleep standard
(bassinets and cradles, cribs (full-size and non-full-size), play
yards, or bedside sleepers), meet the requirements of 16 CFR part 1218,
including conforming to the definition of a ``bassinet/cradle.''
VII. Response to Comments
The Commission collected comments on the 2017 NPR, which proposed
to incorporate by reference the then-current voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products, ASTM F3118-17, with a modification to
the standard's definition of ``accessory.'' 82 FR 16964 (April 7,
2017). The Commission also collected comments on the 2019 SNPR, which
proposed to incorporate by reference the current voluntary standard for
infant inclined sleep products (ASTM F3118-17a), with modifications to
make the standard more stringent, to further reduce the risk of injury.
84 FR 60949 (Nov. 12, 2019). The 2019 SNPR proposed to expand the scope
of the rule to include all unregulated infant sleep products, including
inclined products and non-inclined, flat products. The 2019 SNPR
invited the public to submit written comments during a 75-day comment
period, beginning on the SNPR publication date, and ending on January
27, 2020. In response to a request for an extension of the comment
period, the Commission extended the comment period by 30 days, closing
on February 26, 2020. 85 FR 4918 (Jan. 28, 2020).
Below we consolidate the Commission's responses to comments on the
2017 NPR and the 2019 SNPR. In response to the 2017 NPR, the Commission
received seven comments. In response to the 2019 SNPR, the Commission
received 56 comments within the comment period. We also considered two
late-filed documents, one received on February 2, 2021, and one
received on April 30, 2021. We organized the comments by rulemaking
notice (2017 NPR or 2019 SNPR), and then by topic.
Numerous commenters on the 2019 SNPR, such as the American Academy
of Pediatrics (AAP), consumer groups, and individual parents, supported
the SNPR, because the products covered in the final rule will be
required to follow the AAP safe sleep guidelines. Based on
consideration of the comments received, for the final rule, the
Commission will maintain the proposed 12-month effective date, and make
several clarifications, as listed in section I.F of this preamble.
A. Comments on the 2017 NPR
1. Safety of Inclined Products
Comment 1: Three commenters disagreed with the 2017 NPR, stating
that infant sleep products with a 30-degree seat back angle are not
safe and contradict the AAP's safe sleep
[[Page 33046]]
recommendations. One commenter also indicated that the Commission
should:
Conduct more research on the 30-degree seat back angle;
Conduct more research on developmental implications when
an infant is restrained while sleeping;
Provide performance requirements to address product
misassembly;
Make the side height requirement match the 7.5 side height
requirement in the bassinets and cradles standard;
Develop performance or design changes for compact units so
they cannot be placed on a raised surface, in crib, or on soft surface;
Add seat back height requirement for infant products like
newborn products;
Add requirements for hammocks to increase stability;
Add requirements for flat sleep products, so an infant
cannot move into an unsafe chin to chest position;
Add pictograms to warnings like slings and hand-held
carriers;
Include ``marking'' on products to show compliance with
new regulations;
Conduct market surveillance after a regulation becomes
effective; and
Have a 6-month effective date for the final rule.
Response 1: We agree, based on the Mannen Study, that infant sleep
products, as defined in the final rule, should not have a seat back/
sleep surface angle greater than 10 degrees. The Commission proposed to
address many of the commenter's in-scope recommendations noted above in
the 2019 SNPR, and is now finalizing the requirements, by requiring
inclined and flat sleep products that are marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months old, to
meet the bassinet standard. Due to the expected significant economic
impact on some manufacturers, the Commission will maintain the proposed
12-month effective date for the final rule.
2. Definition of ``Infant Inclined Sleep Product''
Comment 2: A commenter stated that the phrase, ``primarily intended
and marketed to provide sleeping accommodations,'' in the proposed
definition of an ``infant inclined sleep product,'' is not needed,
because ``incorporating a manufacturer's marketing intentions into a
definition of a product which impacts the safety standard of that
product opens the door to potential conflicts of interests.'' The
commenter reasoned that a child's age and the product incline are
objective factors, while a manufacturer's intent is more subjective,
and could allow manufacturers to market the product in a way to avoid
meeting the requirements of the rule.
Response 2: Although the definition the commenter refers to in the
standard no longer includes the term ``inclined,'' we respond here to
the concept of including the phrase ``marketed or intended'' in the
definition of ``infant sleep product'' in the final rule. A
manufacturer's intended use of the product and marketing guide informs
caregivers about the product's safe use. Manufacturers of products that
are not designed or marketed for use as an infant sleep product should
provide caregivers with instructions and warnings regarding safe use of
the product. Including a manufacturer's marketing and intent in the
definition also assists the Commission to enforce the regulation,
because it provides objective criteria for CPSC staff to apply to a
product's name, packaging, warnings, labeling, and marketing materials
about whether the product falls within the scope of the rule. CPSC
staff has experience using marketing materials to enforce CPSC's
regulations, and CPSC is required to use such materials in some cases.
For example, section 3 of the CPSA provides factors for determining
whether a product is a ``children's product,'' and includes several
factors that require reviewing labeling, promotion, and advertising, to
determine whether a product is ``designed or intended primarily for
children 12 years of age or younger.'' 15 U.S.C. 2052(a)(2). Products
that have no use other than infant sleep, based on the product's
design, cannot be labelled as not intended for infant sleep to avoid
meeting the requirements of the final rule.
3. Comments Superseded by the 2019 SNPR
Comment 3: Two commenters agreed with the modification of the
``accessory'' definition in the 2017 NPR, and with the 12-month
effective date. One commenter had a specific comment related to
restraint requirements in the NPR.
Response 3: The 2019 SNPR supersedes the 2017 NPR. The proposed
modification to the definition of ``accessory'' is no longer at issue
in the final rule, because this definition has been removed, along with
other requirements related to inclined sleep products. The Commission
will maintain the 12-month effective date for the final rule, to
provide manufacturers and importers sufficient time to come into
compliance. Allowance of a restraint requirement in an infant sleep
product was unique to inclined sleep products to contain the infant in
the product. Consistent with the 2019 SNPR, the Commission removed the
restraint requirement in the final rule, because restraints can create
a strangulation hazard. The passive containment provision in the
bassinet and cradle standard, which requires a product side height of
7.5 inches and a flat (below 10 degree) sleep surface, follows safe
sleep practices for containment: A bare, flat, infant sleep surface.
B. Comments on the 2019 SNPR
1. Scope of the Final Rule
(a) All Products Marketed, Promoted, or Otherwise Indicated for Sleep
Comment 4: A commenter suggested: ``[t]he new standard should apply
not just to those infant products intended by the manufacturer for
sleep or certified as being for sleep, but also any product that is
marketed, promoted, or otherwise indicated--or may be reasonably
interpreted as indicating--as being for any kind of sleep, including
products described using substitute language for sleep, such as `nap'
or `snooze.' ''
Several other commenters expressed concern that various terms used
in the 2019 SNPR were vague, and recommended that more precise
definitions be provided for ``sleep'' and ``sleeping accommodations.''
In addition, commenters requested clarification regarding which
products are included in the definitions.
Response 4: In response to this comment, the preamble and
regulation text for the final rule: (1) Clarify that the scope of the
rule includes products with inclined and flat sleep surfaces, and (2)
more precisely explain the definition of an ``infant sleep product.''
For example, to clarify that the scope of the rule includes inclined
and flat sleep products, the scope of CPSC's regulation text in Sec.
1236.2, and the scope of the revised voluntary standard in section 1.3,
explain that the scope of the infant sleep products rule includes
products with inclined and flat sleep surfaces. The final rule also
broadens the definition of an ``infant sleep product'' to include the
term ``marketed'': Which is ``a product marketed or intended to provide
sleeping accommodations for an infant up to 5 months old that is not
subject to any of the following . . . .'' The definition then lists
CPSC's five infant sleep standards, to ensure that all infant products
marketed or intended for infant sleep meet the requirements of a CPSC
sleep standard, so that all products meet minimum safe sleep
requirements. Staff modified the introduction, scope, and definitions
in
[[Page 33047]]
the final rule to clarify the applicability of the rule to any infant
sleep product not covered by another CPSC sleep standard.
While newborns can and do fall asleep in many products, because
young infants sleep for extended hours throughout the day, certain
products are designed, marketed, and intended for infant sleep.
Therefore, ``sleep'' and ``sleeping accommodations'' refer to products
that are marketed or intended for both extended, unattended sleep, and
also napping, snoozing, and other types of sleep in which a parent may
or may not be present, awake, and attentive. Additionally, if a product
name implies the product is for use as an infant sleep product, such as
use of the terms ``bed,'' ``bassinet,'' or ``crib,'' but does not
already comply with the bassinet or crib regulation, the product falls
within the scope of the final rule. If a product, through marketing,
pictures, and written description, indicates that the product is being
sold as an infant sleep product for infants up to 5 months old, that
product will be covered by this regulation if it is not already subject
to a CPSC sleep standard.
The 2019 SNPR included four definitions, ``infant sleep products,''
``newborn sleep products,'' ``compact sleep products,'' and ``accessory
sleep products.'' However, this distinction is not necessary and
creates confusion when identifying infant sleep products, because there
are no unique requirements in this rule based on these definitions.
Accordingly, for the final rule, to clarify which infant sleep products
are subject to the rule, the Commission removed the separate
definitions of ``newborn,'' ``compact,'' and ``accessory'' sleep
products, and will rely solely on the definition of an ``infant sleep
product'':
3.1.7 infant sleep product, n--a product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age,
and that is not subject to any of the following:
16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards
16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers
(b) Distinguishing Non-Sleep Products
Comment 5: A commenter stated that infant car seats, swings, and
rockers typically have seatback angles greater than 30 degrees, adding
that these products have use patterns very similar to products that
fall within the scope of ASTM F3118. The commenter requested
clarification of the distinguishing features or characteristics that
differentiate these two types of products with very similar usage
patterns.
Response 5: The purpose of the final rule is to regulate all
products marketed or intended for infant sleep for infants up to 5
months old. Accordingly, the products within the scope of the final
rule are all marketed and intended for sleep, and do not include car
seats, swings, or rockers, unless a product is marketed or intended for
sleep. Newborns can and do fall asleep in many products, because young
infants typically sleep 16 to 17 hours a day, 1 to 2 hours at a time.
By 3 months, infants can sleep 4 to 5 hours during the day and 9 to 10
hours during the night.\37\ However, products such as car seats,
swings, and rockers typically are not marketed for use as an infant
sleep product; these products are intended for use while the child is
awake. Moreover, regarding car seats, CPSC has jurisdiction only for
use outside of an automobile, when the product is being used as an
infant carrier; while the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) has jurisdiction over car seats being used in an
automobile, including the car seats' angle and design for safe use in
an automobile.
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\37\ https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/topic/default?id=infant-sleep-90-P02237.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment 6: Several commenters stated that the scope of the 2019
SNPR was too broad, and expressed concerns that non-sleep products
would be included. Some of the comments requested specific exclusions
or inclusions to the scope of the final rule.
Response 6: The final rule does not apply to products that are not
marketed or intended for infant sleep, such as bouncer seats, swings,
infant chairs, or other similar durable infant or toddler products that
are marketed for use while a child is awake. In addition, the
Commission is specifically excluding crib mattresses that fall within
the scope of the voluntary standard for crib mattresses, ASTM F2933,
from the scope of the final rule. A crib mattress, alone, does not meet
the definition of an ``infant sleep product,'' and is always used in
conjunction with a sleep product, such as a crib or play yard, which
are within one of the five existing CPSC sleep standards. The
Commission issued a notice of proposed rulemaking for crib mattresses
in 2020, and we intend to finalize a separate rule on crib mattresses
this fiscal year.
The purpose of the rule is to set minimum safe sleep requirements
for products that are marketed or intended for infant sleep up to 5
months old. The Commission is aware that infant sleep products share
hazard patterns that can be addressed by performance and labeling
requirements; but currently, a gap exists between regulated and
unregulated products. Therefore, the scope of the final rule includes
all infant sleep products not already covered by a mandatory CPSC sleep
standard (bassinets, full-sized cribs, non-full-sized cribs, play
yards, or bedside sleepers), and requires the product to be tested to
the bassinet standard as a default, so that all infant sleep products
follow a mandatory safety standard for infant sleep, specifically (and
minimally) the standard for bassinets and cradles. Based on staff's
evaluation, following the requirements of the bassinet and cradle
standard would address the hazard patterns found in the incident data
for unregulated inclined and flat sleep products (see section VI of
this preamble and Tab B and C of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package).
The Commission is also concerned about new infant sleep products
that come on the market and that do not follow any CPSC sleep standard.
The concern is that caregivers may view these products as safe because
they are on the market, even though these products may not address
known infant sleep hazards or may not be tested to an appropriate
standard. Accordingly, the final rule requires all products marketed or
intended for sleep for infants up to 5 months old to follow core safe
sleep principles, which the Commission, in agreement with AAP, states
are: Place infants alone, on their back, and on a flat, firm surface
with no restraints or loose fabric nearby.
Rather than list specific inclusions and exclusions, other than
excluding crib mattresses, the scope and definitions in the final rule
address potential confusion about which infant sleep products are
covered. For example, the definition of an ``infant sleep product''
states:
3.1.7 infant sleep product, n--a product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age,
and that is not subject to any of the following:
16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards
[[Page 33048]]
16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers
Comment 7: Several commenters asked for clarification regarding
whether products, similar in design to inclined sleepers but marketed
as a ``soother,'' ``rocker,'' or ``lounger,'' are in-scope for the
rule, and suggested that such products should be in-scope due to the
potential for consumer confusion as to intended uses. We also received
a comment asking that inclined products for activity and transport,
such as a bouncers, strollers, and swings, be excluded from the scope
of the rule.
Response 7: Infant products, inclined or flat, do not fall within
the scope of the final rule as long as they are not intended for sleep,
and they are marketed conspicuously as not for sleep by infants up to 5
months old. This means that the product packaging, marketing materials,
inserts, and instructions cannot indicate that the product is for
sleep, or imply through pictures of sleeping infants that sleeping in
the product is acceptable. In addition, if ``attended'' or
``supervised'' sleep is indicated, then the product would be considered
within the scope of the final rule. The product name, description, and
instructions also cannot include references to sleep, snooze, dream, or
nap. CPSC staff would consider decorations on the product that include
pictures of sleeping animals or sleeping cartoon figures to imply the
product is intended for sleep. Additionally, the product must not be
described as a bed. Some of these products, such as stroller
accessories, are already required by the mandatory standard for that
product type to meet the bassinet standard when the product is in
bassinet mode.
Comment 8: One commenter acknowledged that the scope of the rule
does not include sleep positioners and requested ``the CPSC to better
enforce the ban on sleep positioners.''
Response 8: Neither CPSC, nor FDA, has a ``ban on sleep
positioners''; however, both agencies advise consumers not to use them
with infants due to the risk of suffocation. Sleep positioners are
considered accessories, and not an ``infant sleep product'' under the
definition proposed in the 2019 SNPR or as clarified in the final rule.
Similar to crib mattresses, sleep positioners are not intended to be
used as the sole product for sleep; instead, they are used in
conjunction with a sleep product, for example, to hold an infant in a
position while inside a crib. Therefore, sleep positioners do not fall
within the final rule because they are not intended to provide a
sleeping accommodation for an infant. The Commission declines to
explicitly exclude sleep positioners from the final rule at this time.
(c) Upper Age Limit for Infants Up to 5 Months Old
Comment 9: The 2019 SNPR posed a question regarding whether the
Commission should remove the upper age limit from the scope of the
mandatory standard, to accommodate a broad scope of infant sleep
products. Several commenters stated that the final rule should remain
applicable to products intended for infants up to 5 months old.
Otherwise, the commenters said new requirements addressing containment,
stability, and side height would need to be added to the bassinet
standard for products intended for ages 6 to 12 months, noting that the
existing bassinet requirements are designed only for infants up to 5
months old.
Response 9: After further consideration, the Commission agrees that
changing the scope of the final rule to remove the upper age limit, or
to include products intended for infants up to 12 months old (as
suggested at an ASTM task group meeting), would require new
performance, labeling, and testing requirements in the bassinet
standard. As the commenters noted, the bassinet standard only applies
to infants up to 5 months of age. Therefore, a number of requirements
in the ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 bassinet standard, would need to be changed
to address older, larger, and more mobile and active infants, including
changes to the scope in section 1.3, the stability requirement in
section 6.4, and the side height requirement in section 6.5.4.
Additionally, the final rule focuses on hazards to young infants
associated with infant sleep products because infants under 5 months
old are the most vulnerable, due to their limited mobility and young,
developing respiratory system. Requiring currently unregulated inclined
and flat sleep products to meet the bassinet standard sets minimum
requirements for safe sleep. Bassinets are designed for children who
are not yet mobile, and the final rule addresses the hazards seen in
this population. Older infants, i.e., 6 to 12 months old, have
different needs for sleep, and the existing standards for this older
age group are designed to address those needs. By 6 months of age,
infants have developed enough mobility that they can perform such
actions as rolling back and forth and pulling themselves up. The
Commission agrees with CPSC staff's assessment that it is unsafe for 6
to 12 month olds to be in a confined space, such as a bassinet, for
sleeping, as they may roll out of the product, or pull themselves out
of the product.
The unregulated products on the market with which CPSC has
concerns, e.g., in-bed sleepers, baby boxes, and compact bassinets, are
intended for this younger, more vulnerable population. In addition,
CPSC data indicate that 34 percent of the incidents involving inclined
sleep products and 49 percent of the incidents involving unregulated,
flat, sleep products happened to infants 0 to 5 months of age. Infants
6 to 12 months old were involved in 9 percent of inclined sleep
products and 4 percent of unregulated, flat sleep product incidents,
respectively. Therefore, consistent with the 2019 SNPR, the final rule
limits the scope of the standard to infants up to 5 months of age. Due
to the size and design of these unregulated compact/travel products,
older infants should not be placed to sleep in these products, and
older infants are not included within the scope of the final rule.
(d) Consumer Registration Rule
Comment 10: A commenter expressed no objection to requiring product
registration cards for products within the scope of the rule, but
suggested that the Commission ``remain open to innovation as to the
specific methods of achieving optimum product traceability,
particularly now that so many products are linked to internet
devices.''
Response 10: In the 2009 NPR for the consumer registration rule (74
FR 30986 (June 29, 2009)), the Commission said it: ``intends to
encourage innovation in the use of the internet for product
registration,'' and the methods of registration online are encouraged,
whether through a website or email. The Commission is open to
innovation in this area, but we note that section 104(e) of the CPSIA
sets forth a process the Commission must follow to allow new technology
for product registration, in lieu of the product registration card
requirements in part 1130.
Comment 11: A commenter supported the Commission's amendment of the
consumer registration rule, 16 CFR part 1130, to identify infant sleep
products as durable infant or toddler products subject to the product
registration requirements, so that freestanding sleep products without
a frame, are included within the scope of part 1130.
Staff Response 11: To avoid confusion, and to ensure that all
infant sleep products fall within the requirements of part 1130, the
final rule updates the list of durable infant or toddler products in
part 1130 to explicitly identify ``infant sleep products'' as durable
infant or toddler
[[Page 33049]]
products, as a subcategory of bassinets and cradles.
2. Incident Data
(a) Inclusion of Flat Sleep Products
Comment 12: Multiple commenters expressed concern about in-bed
sleepers, baby boxes, and compact bassinets being subject to the
standard. Concerns included:
In-bed sleepers, baby boxes, and compact bassinets are not
identified in CPSC data;
Bed-sharing is a common practice in the United States and
abroad;
Potential disparity in safety among in-bed sleepers versus a
potential ban of in-bed sleepers;
Interest in increased advocacy regarding bed-sharing; and
Differences among products necessitates different requirements
based on demonstrable hazard data.
Commenters objected to including non-inclined sleep products in this
rulemaking, including objecting to replacing the term ``infant inclined
sleep products,'' with the more general ``infant sleep products.''
Instead, these commenters urged the Commission to focus on inclined
products for this rulemaking and to review requirements for non-
inclined products in separate rulemaking efforts. A commenter stated
that it is inappropriate to require all products not subject to an
existing standard to comply with the bassinet standard.
Response 12: The Commission recognizes that bed-sharing is a common
practice of parents, both in the United States and abroad. However, we
cannot recommend bed-sharing as a safe sleep practice, due to the
increased risk of SIDS, overlay, and other hazards. AAP safe sleep
recommendations encourage infants to room-share with parents, but to
provide infants with their own firm, flat space, near the parents, but
not in the same bed. For a more detailed discussion on bed-sharing,
please see CPSC human factor's staff memorandum at Tab D of Staff's
Final Rule Briefing Package.
As discussed in section III of this preamble, in response to the
comments, the Directorate for Epidemiology staff identified 183
incident reports related to non-inclined, flat products marketed as
infant sleep products, such as in-bed sleepers, and compact bassinets.
The incident data, reported to have occurred during the period from
January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2020, identified 11 fatalities and
16 injury reports. Seven of the 11 fatalities described a suffocation
death. The other deaths involved the infant rolling over to a prone
position, or rolling out of the product and becoming entrapped. The
final rule identifies the flat sleep products that fall within the
scope of the rule, provides incident data, describes hazard patterns,
analyzes the effectiveness of the bassinet standard to address the
hazards, and compares the performance requirements in international
standards to demonstrate that these products have similar hazard
patterns that can be addressed by the requirements in the bassinet
standard.
Comment 13: Several commenters urged the Commission to work with
ASTM to develop product-specific safety standards for each of the
identified flat products, such as in-bed sleepers, baby boxes, and
compact bassinets, and to do so in a separate effort.
Response 13: The ASTM process for developing the voluntary standard
for infant inclined sleep products took close to 5 years before the
standard was published. The bassinet subcommittee also has been working
about 5 years to add ``compact bassinets'' to the standard, which has
not been completed. CPSC staff has participated in these efforts and
provided incident data to the ASTM committees and task groups.
Throughout all this time, inclined and compact infant sleep products
have entered the retail market without meeting any safe sleep testing,
voluntary or mandatory. The incident data discussed in section III of
this preamble (Tab B of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package), and the
engineering and human factors analysis in section VI of this preamble
(Tabs C and D of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package), demonstrate that
inclined, compact, and in-bed sleep products pose risks to infants and
therefore, should not be allowed to be sold as infant sleep products
without meeting one of CPSC's mandatory sleep standards.
Comment 14: A commenter stated that no data indicate that overlay
injuries or fatalities exist while using an infant in-bed sleeper.
Response 14: As part of CPSC staff's participation with ASTM
voluntary standards groups, in fall 2017 \38\ and summer 2019,\39\ CPSC
staff provided the ASTM in-bed sleeper working group with incident data
that identified fatal and nonfatal incidents involving in-bed sleepers.
This data demonstrated 11 fatalities and 22 nonfatalities associated
with in-bed sleepers. The primary hazard patterns, consistent with the
incident data discussed in this final rule, involved infants falling
out of in-bed sleepers, rolling into the side, bedsharing, and consumer
complaints.
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\38\ October 2, 2017 email from Hope Nesteruk to Lisa Trofe and
Meredith Thomas, JPMA contacts for ASTM meetings.
\39\ Email dated June 4, 2019, from Hope Nesteruk to Meredith
Thomas, JPMA contact for ASTM meetings.
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An overlay hazard typically occurs during bed-sharing, when a
parent lays over their infant, and typically does not realize they have
done so because they are asleep. Accordingly, during task group and
subcommittee meetings, staff expressed additional concerns with low
side height, soft-sided, in-bed sleepers, because use of such products
may provide parents with a potentially false sense of security when
bed-sharing. Based on this information, and bed-sharing concerns
generally, CPSC has substantial concerns that a low, soft-sided, in-bed
sleeper may not prevent a parent from inadvertently laying over an
infant and suffocating the baby. CPSC data for in-bed sleepers is
anecdotal in nature, and therefore, we may not have received overlay
incidents that involve an in-bed sleeper, but the large number of
overlay incidents reported to the CPSC generally indicate that bed-
sharing can be hazardous.
Comment 15: A commenter stated that the 2019 SNPR is well-
intentioned, but that it is premature, and that the scope of the rule
ultimately may harm consumer safety, because consumers will use soft
bedding and other tools to replace an entire category of products that
effectively are banned under the SNPR. The commenter stated that the
data necessary to support the rule is either missing or incorrect.
Another commenter stated that the data on in-bed sleepers, and the
existing CPSC sleep standards, do not support CPSC's approach in the
2019 SNPR, noting that babies die in all types of infant sleep products
despite having an existing standard, citing bassinets, cribs, and play
yards. Infants die for reasons not associated with the product, the
commenter asserted, adding that CPSC has not presented data to warrant
all infant sleep products without a standard to comply with the
bassinet standard. This commenter maintained that CPSC is using a
``back-door method'' to remove infant products from the market without
the data to support or justify this action. The commenter opined that
CPSC should write safety standards that will ensure safe sleep for each
product type, and not funnel various products into one standard,
bassinets and cradles, which was not intended for these products.
Response 15: In coordination with a range of stakeholders, CPSC has
carefully developed safety regulations for five infant sleep products
(cribs: full-size and non-full-size, bassinets, play
[[Page 33050]]
yards, and bedside sleepers), and we encourage consumers to use these
products for infant sleep. The Commission is aware that deaths occur in
these products, but as noted, infant deaths are not always associated
with the product. We particularly urge consumers to follow the AAP safe
sleep recommendations when using any product intended for infant sleep.
CPSC data, in section III of this preamble (Tab B of Staff's Final Rule
Briefing Package), and evaluated in section VI of this preamble (Tabs C
and D of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package), show that deaths and
injuries occur in untested and unregulated infant sleep products,
including inclined and flat sleep products, and sometimes these
incidents involve a use contrary to AAP recommendations. However,
CPSC's evaluation of the incidents in section VI of this preamble
demonstrates that requiring currently unregulated infant sleep products
to meet the requirements of the bassinet standard will further reduce
the risk of death and injury associated with these products (Tab C of
Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package).
The argument that parents will use soft bedding and other tools to
replace products taken off the market is the same argument used in
support of creating a separate voluntary and mandatory standard for
infant inclined sleep products, and infants died in these products that
did not meet AAP safe sleep guidelines. Accordingly, to further reduce
the risk of death and injury, the final rule requires that all products
marketed or intended as a sleeping accommodation for infants up to 5
months old be tested and certified to an existing CPSC sleep standard,
and that CPSC, the AAP, and the industry, continue to promote and
educate caregivers about safe sleep practices for infants.
(b) Statistically Significant Data
Comment 16: One commenter questioned whether the data presented in
the 2019 SNPR are statistically significant for inclined sleep
products, or are the deaths due to SIDS?
Response 16: The analysis presented in the 2019 SNPR and in this
final rule is based on reported incidents, and therefore, anecdotal in
nature. This means that the data do not constitute a statistical sample
representing all incidents related to inclined and flat sleep products;
nor do the data represent a complete set of incidents that may have
occurred involving the products. As such, no statistical inference is
possible. However, the data do provide at least a minimum count for the
number of incidents related to each type of product reviewed.
Many of the fatality reports contain unclear, conflicting, and/or
inconsistent information. For example, for some deaths, medical
examiners may have concluded the cause of death to be SIDS or Sudden
Unexpected Infant Death (SUID), but they also may mention co-
contributing conditions, such as an unsafe sleep environment (e.g.,
soft bedding, inclined sleep surface) or other pre-existing medical
condition(s). This can confound CPSC's ability to determine a
predominant factor in the fatality. Staff used a consensus-based
decision-making process to review incident data. If an unsafe sleep
environment or a product design was one of the factors, staff
classified the death under that category. Otherwise, staff classified
the reported incident under the ``undetermined'' category, when no one
factor stood out, or staff classified the incident under the
``insufficient information'' category, when staff did not have enough
information to classify the incident in another category to avoid
overestimating the risk.
3. Degree of Incline
(a) Additional Testing for Inclines Between 10 and 20 Degrees
Comment 17: Several commenters stated that the Commission should
conduct additional research on the safety of inclines between 10 and 20
degrees for infant sleep products. A commenter stated that CPSC has
failed to provide relevant data to support the 2019 SNPR's approach
regarding inclined sleep products, to limit the seat back angle to 10
degrees or less, and not to conduct additional study on the 10 to 20
degree angle, or to provide information or incidents to support this
decision.
Response 17: During the development of the 2019 SNPR, Commission
staff contracted with Dr. Erin Mannen to examine how the degree of a
seat back angle affects an infant's ability to move within inclined
sleep products, and if the incline angle directly impacts safety or
presents a risk factor that could contribute to the suffocation of an
infant.\40\ The Mannen Study findings showed that infants in products
with a seat back angle greater than 20 degrees exhibit increased demand
on their abdominal muscles. The Mannen Study concluded that this could
lead to increased fatigue and suffocation, if an infant is unable to
reposition themselves after an accidental roll from supine to prone.
The Mannen Study concluded that a sleep surface that is 10 degrees or
less, is comparable to a crib mattress surface and can be considered a
safe sleep surface. The Mannen Study suggested if future work were done
on safe sleep angles, one area of study would be additional
biomechanical testing to determine ``which, if any, angles between 10-
and 20-degrees may be safe for infant sleep.''
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\40\ Read the full report from Dr. Mannen beginning on page 91,
Tab B, of CPSC Staff's SNPR Briefing Package: https://cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/SupplementalNoticeofProposedRulemakingforInfantSleepProducts_10_16_2019.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Mannen Study recommendations do not imply that an incline angle
above 10 degrees may be safe; rather, the Mannen Study merely suggests
that if higher angles are considered, additional biomechanical testing
is required. We are not aware of existing research that suggests that
an inclined sleep surface between 10 and 20 degrees is safe, nor is
CPSC currently conducting similar research. The Mannen Study also
stated that its testing of awake infants was a limitation because
``while the muscle use and motion may be similar, it is likely that
infants who find themselves in a compromised position in an inclined
sleep product during a nap or overnight sleep may not have enough
energy or alertness to achieve self-correction and may succumb to
suffocation earlier or more easily than infants who are fully awake.''
Given the vulnerability of newborn infants and the precedence of
fatalities of infants who were most likely asleep in inclined products
at the time of incidents, additional research of inclines above 10
degrees is unnecessary for the final rule.
Additionally, other research \41\ has demonstrated a discernable
difference in infant ability between 5, 7, and 10 degrees in a side-to-
side tilt, which formed the basis of the 7-degree maximum sleep surface
angle in Health Canada's regulations and the 5-degree limit in the
Australian requirement. The 10-degree sleep surface limit in the final
rule is a slightly higher allowed sleep surface angle than other
countries. Based on the Mannen Study and the research that supports
sleep surface angles in international standards reviewed by CPSC staff,
staff believes that it is unlikely that additional research at angles
higher than 10 degrees will demonstrate that an angle greater than 10
degrees is safe for infant sleep. Accordingly, for the final rule,
infant sleep products must be tested for a seat back or sleep surface
angle of 10
[[Page 33051]]
degrees or less from horizontal, and they must meet the requirements of
the bassinet and cradle standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Beal SM, Moore L, Collett M, Montgomery B, Sprod C, Beal A.
The danger of freely rocking cradles. J Paediatr Child Health. 1995
Feb;31(1):38-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-1754.1995.tb02910.x. PMID:
7748688.
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(b) Adopt Canadian Standard of 7 Degrees
Comment 18: One commenter stated that Canada only allows up to 7-
degree seat back angle in sleep products, and suggested CPSC should
consider adopting the Canadian standard. Another commenter supported
the SNPR proposal that infant sleep surfaces be no more than 10 degrees
from horizontal.
Response 18: The Mannen Study concluded that a seatback angle of 10
degrees or less is safe. This seatback angle is consistent with CPSC's
Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, which also requires a 10
degree or less incline. We recognize that Health Canada is using a 7-
degree maximum incline; however, that requirement is based on a side-
to-side tilt study of infants in rocking cradles published in 1995. The
2019 Mannen Study compared infant muscle and breathing behavior on a
flat crib mattress and on a crib mattress, head-to-toe 10 degrees from
horizontal, and determined that infant responses were essentially the
same on both sleep surfaces. Accordingly, based on the Mannen Study
findings, to provide a safe sleep surface, the final rule is consistent
with the current requirement in the bassinet and cradle standard,
requiring that infant sleep products must have a head-to-toe incline
angle of 10 degrees or less.
(c) Highest Seat Back Angle Clarification
Comment 19: A commenter requested that CPSC replace the phrase:
``the manufacturer's recommended highest seat back angle position
intended for sleep,'' with ``the seat back angle position that is the
highest position intended for sleep or that is the highest position
that a reasonable consumer would consider as being for infant sleep,
whichever is higher.''
Response 19: The commenter's suggestion, by focusing on the ``seat
back'' of an infant sleep product, illustrates some confusion with
terminology. The 2019 SNPR applied to infant sleep products, and
required all infant sleep products to be 10 degrees or less from
horizontal-the same as the sleep surface in bassinets. However, the
safe sleep principle requirement from the Mannen Study, and already
reflected in the bassinet standard, is that infants should sleep flat
on their backs. Accordingly, the SNPR term ``seat back'' created
confusion, because the term implies that infant sleep products are for
``sitting'' in a device with a ``seat.'' Thus, to reduce this confusion
in the final rule, we replace the term ``seat back'' with the term
``Seat Back/Sleep Surface.''
4. Safe Sleep Principles
(a) Request to Ban Infant Inclined Sleep Products
Comment 20: Approximately 25 commenters requested that CPSC ``ban''
or ``remove'' infant inclined sleep products from store shelves. Of
those commenters, three indicated that their child died while sleeping
in an inclined sleep product.
Response 20: Many products with an incline greater than 10 degrees
from horizontal have been removed from the market through CPSC recalls.
To address newly manufactured products, the final rule does not ``ban''
all infant sleep products with an angle, but addresses the hazards
associated with inclined sleep products by requiring that any product
marketed or intended for sleep for infants up to 5 months old must not
have a sleep surface angle greater than 10 degrees, and that any
currently unregulated infant sleep product meet the bassinet standard.
The purpose of these requirements is to ensure that all infant sleep
products meet minimum safe-sleep principles, including the sleep
surface angle, as addressed through an existing CPSC sleep standard.
(b) Aligning with AAP Safe Sleep Practices
Comment 21: One commenter acknowledged that the 2019 SNPR aligns
with the AAP's safe sleep recommendations, and encourages CPSC to
ensure that the proposed rule sends a clear message addressing safe
sleep practices.
Response 21: The Commission is committed to addressing safe sleep
practices in this rulemaking and ensuring that all products marketed,
intended, promoted, or otherwise indicated as being for any kind of
infant sleep for infants up to 5 months old are addressed. Therefore,
the final rule requires that all infant sleep products, including
inclined and flat products, be subject to 16 CFR part 1218, Safety
Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, because part 1218 includes safe
sleep requirements. Additionally, CPSC's website provides extensive
information regarding best practices for safe sleep through its CPSC's
Safe Sleep Campaign and Baby Safety information at: https://www.cpsc.gov/SafeSleep.
(c) Use of Unsafe Products by Sleep Deprived Parents
Comment 22: One commenter expressed concern that parents,
particularly those who are sleep deprived, cannot reasonably be
expected to use a product that is unsafe by design in a safe manner.
Response 22: Lack of sleep may have a detrimental effect on a
parent's judgment when using an infant sleep product. Research
demonstrates that fatigue can negatively affect memory, concentration,
and decision making.\42\ The final rule is the most effective method of
ensuring that infant sleep products for infants up to 5 months of age
are safe for use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ https://www.sleepfoundation.org/sleep-deprivation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Definitions
(a) Remove ``Intended'' From Definitions
Comment 23: A commenter requested that the word ``intended'' be
struck from the definitions of infant and newborn sleep products.
Response 23: We disagree with the request to remove ``intended''
from the definitions. Manufacturer's intent, which can be evaluated
through stated warning messages, marketing photos, product instructions
and other factors, must remain a factor for staff's consideration. As
the commenter noted, some products are marketed for swinging or
bouncing. If infant products are not intended for sleep and are not
marketed in ways that imply they are for sleeping or napping, they are
not subject to the infant sleep product standard. CPSC will evaluate a
manufacturer's intent using all available materials, including
marketing. Accordingly, the final rule maintains the word ``intended''
and also broadens the definition of an ``infant sleep product'' to
include the word ``marketed.''
(b) Define or Clarify ``Free Standing'' Infant Sleep Products
Comment 24: One commenter contended that ``free standing'' is an
ambiguous term.
Response 24: A ``free-standing'' infant sleep product is a sleep
product that can be used by itself, without the need of another
product, such as a portable play yard. ASTM F3118--17a contains a
separate definition for ``accessory inclined sleep product,'' which
applies to products that are supported by another product, such as a
play yard. The term ``free-standing'' is used without issue in other
ASTM and CPSC standards. For the final rule, the
[[Page 33052]]
definition of ``infant sleep product'' is broadened to cover all
inclined and flat products marketed or intended as a sleeping
accommodation, regardless of whether the product is free-standing or
attached to another product. Accordingly, we removed the term ``free-
standing'' from the definition of ``infant sleep product'' in the final
rule, to reduce confusion about which infant sleep products are subject
to the rule.
6. Warnings and Instructions
(a) Provide Information About Scoliosis and Torticollis
Comment 25: One commenter recommended that information about
deformities, such as scoliosis and torticollis, be included on an
insert with all infant sleep products.
Response 25: Providing parents with information and resources
regarding various infant deformities is beneficial, and manufacturers
are not prevented from including this information if they desire.
However, as indicated in the 2019 SNPR, increases in the number of
children with plagiocephaly may actually be attributed to the AAP's
recommendation to place infants to sleep on their backs to decrease the
risk of SIDS. The final rule does not contain any modifications to the
voluntary standard to address this issue.
(b) Placement of Warnings
Comment 26: One commenter recommended that warnings should be
placed on the outside and inside of the packaging, as well as on the
product. The commenter also recommended that packaging should be
labeled, easily visible, and easy to read/understand.
Response 26: Consistent with the 2019 SNPR, the final rule requires
that infant sleep products not already subject to a CPSC sleep
standard, be subject to the warning requirements set forth in the
bassinet standard, ASTM F2194-16[egr]1, which requires that warning
labels be present on the product and its packaging, and that warning
information be present in the instructional literature. ASTM F2194-16e1
also requires that the warnings be conspicuous, permanent, and easy to
read/understand.
7. Economic Analysis
Comment 27: A commenter suggested that CPSC conduct an exposure
study to research the relative risks of these different sleep products.
This commenter also suggested that CPSC perform a full cost-benefit
analysis of the final rule.
Response 27: CPSC is continuing research topics related to safe
sleep, which may potentially involve types of infant sleep products.
Although an exposure study is an effective means to estimate exposure,
we can estimate exposure by comparing annual sales of products to the
number of live births, and staff identifies the hazard patterns from
the incident data. The Commission is not required to conduct cost-
benefit analyses under section 104 of the CPSIA, and has not done so
for any durable infant or toddler rulemaking. We are uncertain what the
purpose of such an analysis would accomplish for a rule promulgated
under section 104 of the CPSIA, where cost/benefit considerations are
not germane to the Commission's rulemaking authority.
8. Effective Date
Comment 28: Commenters both supported and opposed the 12-month
effective date. Some opposing commenters supported a 6-month effective
date instead, because additional time for the rule to become effective
puts infants at risk, while other opposing commenters wanted a longer
effective date, or an indefinite delay until ASTM completes additional
standards for specific products. The 2019 SNPR proposed that the
effective date would apply to products manufactured or imported after
the final rule effective date. We received multiple comments that the
effective date should apply to products sold after the final rule
effective date instead of the ``sold by date,'' to prevent stockpiling
and remove the hazards as soon as possible.
Response 28: For the final rule, the Commission will maintain the
2019 SNPR proposed effective date of 12 months after the date of
publication in the Federal Register. A 6-month effective date may seem
reasonable because suppliers have had ample lead time to prepare for
this rule since the SNPR was published in 2019, and many of the
products within the scope of the final rule have been withdrawn from
the market or redesigned, particularly for inclined sleep products.
However, for manufacturers of other unregulated flat sleep products
that remain in the market, there will likely be a significant economic
impact as a result of this final rule. While some suppliers can reduce
the impact of this rule by relabeling their products as not for infant
sleep, not all manufacturers can simply remarket the product if the
physical form of the product demonstrates that it is intended for
sleep. For some of these products, manufacturers could relabel them as
intended for infants older than five months, or, in some cases, for
pets. However, the demand for infant sleep products for pet use is
probably limited.
The final rule is considered a consumer product safety standard
issued under the Commission's authority in section 104 of the CPSIA.
Section 104(b)(1)(B). We are unclear regarding what the commenters'
``sold by'' date references. The Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA)
sets forth requirements for manufacturers and importers once a rule
becomes effective. Section 19(a)(1) of the CPSA states:
(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to--
(1) sell, offer for sale, manufacture for sale, distribute in
commerce, or import into the United States any consumer product, or
other product or substance that is regulated under this Act or any
other Act enforced by the Commission, that is not in conformity with an
applicable consumer product safety rule under this Act, or any similar
rule, regulation, standard, or ban under any other Act enforced by the
Commission;
15 U.S.C. 2068(a)(1). Accordingly, the CPSA provides that, as of
the effective date of the final rule, it is unlawful to ``sell, offer
for sale, manufacture for sale, distribute in commerce, or import into
the United States,'' any infant sleep product, as defined in the rule,
that is not in conformity with the final rule.
9. Procedural Comments
(a) Products Subject to the Final Rule
Comment 29: A commenter stated that the proposed rule would apply
to domestic products, and not to products made overseas. The commenter
stated that the rule should apply to products made overseas and sold in
the United States, for ``optimal consumer safety.''
Response 29: The commenter appears to misunderstand the scope of
products subject to the final rule. If finalized, the rule would make
it unlawful to sell, offer for sale, manufacture for sale, distribute
in commerce, or import into the United States, an infant sleep product
that is not in conformity with this rule, regardless of whether the
product was manufactured in the United States or overseas.
(b) Incorporation by Reference
Comment 30: A commenter states that the Commission should publish
the legal standard for infant sleep products, rather than incorporate
the standard by reference. The commenter stated:
Publishing the legal standard ``will advance fundamental
principles of fair notice and due process by ensuring that the public
has open and unimpeded access to the law.''
The law belongs to the people, regardless of who drafts the
law, and thus citizens have a fundamental right to know what the law
contains.
[[Page 33053]]
When the public is not informed about relevant legal
standards, this has the potential for arbitrary or discriminatory
enforcement.
People cannot comply with a law if they do not know the
substance of the law.
Response 30: Section 104 of the CPSIA directs the Commission to
issue standards for durable infant or toddler products that are
``substantially the same as,'' or more stringent than, applicable
voluntary standards. Thus, unless the Commission determines that more
stringent requirements are necessary to further reduce the risk of
injury, the Commission's rules must be, for the most part, the same as
the applicable voluntary standard. In this case, the final rule would
incorporate by reference ASTM F3118-17a, with substantial modifications
to make the standard more stringent, to further reduce the risk of
injury associated with infant sleep products. This final rule would set
forth in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR): Definitions, one test
for the seatback/sleep surface angle of an infant sleep product, and
otherwise require infant sleep products that do not already meet a CPSC
sleep standard to meet the requirements of the bassinet standard, to
further reduce the risk of injury associated with inclined and flat
infant sleep products. CPSC's bassinet standard, 16 CFR part 1218,
currently incorporates by reference performance and labeling
requirements in ASTM F2194-13, with modifications set forth in the CFR.
CPSC's mandatory standard is substantially similar to ASTM F2194-
16[egr]1.
ASTM's voluntary standards are protected by copyright, which the
Commission (and the federal government generally) must observe. The
United States may be held liable for copyright infringement. 28 U.S.C.
1498. Accordingly, the Commission cannot violate copyright law by
publishing ASTM's voluntary standards in the CFR. The Office of the
Federal Register (OFR) has established procedures for incorporation by
reference that seek to balance the interests of copyright protection
and public accessibility of material. 1 CFR part 51. OFR's regulations
are based on Freedom of Information Act provisions that require
materials to be ``reasonably available'' when incorporated by reference
with approval of the Director of the Federal Register. 5 U.S.C.
552(a)(1). Under the OFR's requirements, an agency may incorporate by
reference specific publications, including standards, if they are
``reasonably available to and usable by the class of persons
affected.'' 1 CFR 51.7. To ensure the material is ``reasonably
available,'' an agency must summarize the material it will incorporate
by reference and discuss how that material is available to interested
parties in the Federal Register notice. Id. Sec. Sec. 51.3(a),
51.5(a).
Manufacturers and importers of infant sleep products represent the
class of persons affected by the final rule. Although any interested
person has access to the content of CPSC's regulations through Federal
Register notices of proposed and final rules, the CFR, and the content
of voluntary standards on ASTM's website, under the statutory scheme
set forth in the CPSIA, it is those manufacturers and importers who
want to ``sell, offer for sale, manufacture for sale, distribute in
commerce, or import into the United States,'' any durable infant or
toddler product, that must conduct testing using a third party
conformity assessment body (lab) and certify their product as compliant
with the applicable consumer product safety rule. 15 U.S.C. Sec.
2063(a)(2).
The Commission complies with the requirement that publications,
including standards, are ``reasonably available to and usable by the
class of persons affected,'' whenever incorporating material by
reference. For example, when the Commission proposes a rule under
section 104 of the CPSIA, the Commission describes and summarizes the
requirements of the rule, including the voluntary standard, in the
preamble of the rule printed in the Federal Register, and explains that
ASTM's copyrighted voluntary standards are available to review online
for free during the comment period at https://www.astm.org/CPSC.htm.
Once a rule becomes effective, ASTM provides a read-only copy of the
standard for review on the ASTM website at: https://www.astm.org/READINGLIBRARY/. As always, any person can purchase a voluntary
standard from ASTM, or may schedule a time to review a voluntary
standard (for free) at the Commission's headquarters in Bethesda, MD,
or at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
Accordingly, citizens who are interested in the content of the law have
unimpeded access to the regulation, and have several avenues for free
access to the text of voluntary standards incorporated by reference
into a mandatory CPSC standard for a durable infant or toddler product.
Comment 31: A commenter states that CPSC's practice of
incorporating voluntary standards by reference into law forces citizens
to either visit the agency in person, or pay for access, to view the
proposed law. The commenter contends that CPSC's actions to allow
public access to the proposal, including summarizing the proposed
requirements in the preamble to the proposed rule, making the voluntary
standard available for review at CPSC's offices, or reading the
standard on ASTM's website free of charge, are all problematic, as the
regulations are not ``reasonably available'' to the class or persons
affected. The commenter states that ASTM's restrictions on downloading
or printing the standard (unless the standard is purchased) are an
impediment to accessing the law, and describes the Commission's access
to the proposed law as ``limited'' and insufficient to ``ensure robust
public access to the law.'' Specifically, the commenter notes that
without the ability to download graphs and charts in the ASTM standard,
the graphs are unreadable in portrait view. The commenter states that
``reasonably available'' is not defined in the APA, but should be
interpreted broadly ``to promote fundamental constitutional values. . .
.''
Response 31: We disagree with the commenter that CPSC's efforts to
make voluntary standards ``reasonably available'' are ``limited.'' For
rules issued under section 104 of the CPSIA, stakeholders have several
ways to access the content of the voluntary standard proposed to be
incorporated by reference, and after the standard is incorporated by
reference into a regulation, including reading a summary of the
requirements of a voluntary standard in a proposed or final rule
(free), reviewing voluntary standards in person at CPSC's offices
(free), reviewing read-only copies of the voluntary standard on ASTM's
website (free), and by purchasing a copy of the standard. The OFR's
regulations do not require free access to the contents of copyrighted
materials. In developing a regulation, the OFR considered whether to
require free access to materials that are incorporated by reference
into regulations, and specifically declined to do so. 79 FR 66267 (Nov.
7, 2014). The OFR found that adopting requirements to summarize the
content of the material incorporated, and explaining to stakeholders
how to obtain the material, was adequate to make the material
``reasonably available.'' Id. at 66,270. Accordingly, CPSC's efforts to
make copyrighted materials reasonably available exceed the OFR's
requirements.
Comment 32: A commenter states that incorporation by reference,
without providing free access to the law, undermines due process
because it may
[[Page 33054]]
limit public input and exclude meaningful participation by some
stakeholders. The commenter explains, for example, that to participate
in ASTM standards development, one must be an ASTM member, which costs
$75 per year. The commenter notes that the regulated community can
afford this and participate, while members of the public cannot
meaningfully participate.
Response 32: Stakeholders have several options to review the
content of a voluntary standard for free, as described in response to
comments 30 and 31. ASTM typically seeks a cross section of
stakeholders to participate in standards development. While ASTM
requires membership to vote on balloted items to create or revise a
voluntary standard, ASTM does not require membership to participate in
ASTM meetings where stakeholders discuss standards development for
durable infant or toddler products. Thus, if a consumer wanted to
participate in an ASTM meeting, they could do so without membership.
Additionally, if a consumer wanted to become an ASTM voting member and
cannot afford the membership fee, that person can contact ASTM to learn
about additional options for membership. For example, students can be
ASTM members free of charge.
We further note that CPSC's regulation at 16 CFR part 1031 does not
allow staff to participate in voluntary standards meetings that are not
open to the public. CPSC staff's participation in ASTM meetings
discussing durable infant or toddler products are posted on CPSC's
calendar (on CPSC's website) at least a week in advance. The meeting
notice provides the date, time, purpose of the meeting, the staff
attending, and contact information for staff (to obtain ASTM login
information) so that any person who wants to participate in the ASTM
meeting may do so. Moreover, CPSC staff creates a written meeting log
for each ASTM meeting where staff participates, which summarizes the
meeting content.
We encourage members of the public to meaningfully participate in
standards development efforts for durable infant or toddler products
through the ASTM process and by commenting on CPSC's proposed rules.
Comment 33: A commenter describes a recent holding by the Eleventh
Circuit finding that annotations to a Georgia statute were
``sufficiently law-like'' to require free public access. The commenter
also describes two district court cases challenging PACER system fees,
but notes the cases are in the early stages of litigation, but ``the
underlying principles of free public access to the law and legal
proceedings are directly relevant here.''
Response 33: As described in response to comments 30 and 31, CPSC
exceeds the OFR's regulation requiring that voluntary standards that
are incorporated by reference be made reasonably available to the class
of persons affected, because the voluntary standards incorporated by
reference by CPSC in rules under section 104 of the CPSIA are available
for review by all interested parties. ASTM provides access to review
voluntary standards incorporated by reference before and after a
rulemaking, free of charge, on ASTM's website. Additionally, any person
can schedule a time to review a voluntary standard (for free) at the
Commission's headquarters in Bethesda, MD, or at the National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA).
(c) Alleged Notice and Comment and Section 104 Procedural Defects
Comment 34: A commenter states that the rulemaking process for
including flat products within the scope of the 2019 SNPR, such as in-
bed sleepers, is procedurally deficient and does not follow the
procedure for rules issued under section 104 of the CPSIA, because the
Commission's 2019 SNPR did not include sufficient data demonstrating
the need for a rule to cover non-inclined sleep products. The commenter
states that the data set for non-inclined products is incomplete and
insufficiently reviewed, suggesting that the Commission did not review
incident data for non-inclined products with the ASTM committee. The
commenter states that the Commission's failure to publish a revised
SNPR to include CPSC staff's concerns with compact bassinets, baby
boxes, and in-bed sleepers, as described in a December 12, 2019 letter
from staff to several ASTM subcommittees, which the commenter states
did not appear in the 2019 SNPR, and to instead provide a 30 day
extension of the comment period, was insufficient notice to all
interested parties, and may result in a flawed standard that is unable
to withstand judicial scrutiny.
Response 34: The 2019 SNPR provided notice to stakeholders that
unregulated, non-inclined, flat infant sleep products were included in
the proposal, by proposing to remove the term ``inclined'' from the
standard, and to include within the scope of the rule currently
unregulated infant sleep products, including inclined and non-inclined
products. For example, the SNPR states:
``CPSC's proposed standard would cover products intended
for infant sleep that are not already addressed by another standard.''
84 FR at 60949.
``CPSC proposes to define `infant sleep products' as
products that provide sleeping accommodations for infants that are not
currently covered by bassinets/cradles, cribs (full-size and non-full
size), play yards, and bedside sleepers . . .'' Id. at 60950. Similar
statements are also made on pages 60951 (three times), 60956, and in
the draft regulatory text (proposed Sec. 1236.1, Sec. 1236.2(b)(4)(D)
and Sec. 1236.2(b)(11)(i)) at 60962-63).
``The Supplemental NPR proposes to incorporate ASTM F3118-
17a with substantial modifications, including revisions in the scope of
the standard, section 1.3, to remove the term ``inclined,'' and to
include any infant sleep product not currently covered by another
mandatory rule for infant sleep products. . . .''
The request for comments on page 60961 asks for comments
on non-inclined products likely to be impacted by the SNPR, including,
for example, a request for comment on:
[cir] ``. . . any additional types of products that commenters
believe may be impacted by the Supplemental NPR.''
[cir] ``. . . products with inclines less than or equal to 10
degrees that do not already comply with the bassinet standard.''
[cir] removing the upper age limit of 5 months because the SNPR
``proposes to address `infant sleep products' not already covered by
traditional sleep product [standards].''
The Staff's October 16, 2019 SNPR Briefing Package,
referenced in the Federal Register notice, contains similar statements
about the scope of the rule (pages 15, 16, 21, 117, 136), and on page
133 also specifically states (and on page 134, Figure 1 provides a
picture of an unregulated flat sleep product):
The draft supplemental proposed rule would also cover products with
inclined sleep surfaces greater than 30 degrees and less than 10
degrees, if they are intended or marketed for children under 5 months
of age for sleep purposes, and they are not subject to another sleep
product standard. For example, the draft supplemental proposed rule
would include the hammock-style crib accessory shown in Figure 1. It
appears to have an incline of 10 degrees or less, but does not fall
under another sleep category.
CPSC's description of the scope of the rule throughout the 2019
SNPR and the Staff's SNPR Briefing Package, and the request for comment
on these products, were sufficient to inform stakeholders that these
unregulated flat sleep
[[Page 33055]]
products were included within the scope of the rule.
In addition, ASTM members had actual notice of the contents of the
2019 SNPR before and after publication. Sections V.A.3 and V.B.2 of
this preamble discuss staff's work with the ASTM subcommittees and task
groups. Staff's SNPR Briefing Package was posted on the Commission's
website on October 16, 2019, before ASTM held fall meetings on
voluntary standards for juvenile products, and before the Commission
voted on the SNPR, so that ASTM members and other stakeholders could
review the package, including the Mannen Study, before the ASTM
meetings, and so that staff could discuss the package and the Mannen
Study with ASTM members. The ASTM Agenda for the Infant Inclined Sleep
Products meeting that occurred on October 21, 2019 included a link to
Staff's SNPR Briefing Package. CPSC staff discussed the 2019 SNPR
Briefing Package at the ASTM meetings in October 2019, including with
the ASTM subcommittees for infant inclined sleep products, in-bed
sleepers, and bassinets, discussing the Mannen Study findings, as well
as addressing the fact that flat sleep products were covered by the
SNPR. Dr. Mannen attended the subcommittee meeting for infant inclined
sleep products via telephone, to discuss the Mannen Study and to answer
questions.
The SNPR published in the Federal Register on November 12, 2019. In
a December 12, 2019 letter to both the ASTM inclined sleep and bassinet
subcommittees, CPSC staff again reiterated its concerns with weakening
the safe sleep requirements in the voluntary standard for bassinets and
cradles to accommodate unregulated products, such as in-bed sleepers,
compact bassinets, and baby boxes. Thus, the letter represents an
additional effort to ensure that the relevant ASTM subcommittees (and
thus subcommittee members) were aware of CPSC staff's concerns with
these products, as well as the content of the 2019 SNPR, which proposed
that flat sleep products would need to meet the requirements of the
bassinet standard. Even though this letter was in addition to, and not
instead of, the notice provided in the 2019 SNPR, the Commission
extended the comment period for an additional 30 days, to accommodate
any confusion among stakeholders. The final rule addresses scope and
data concerns submitted by commenters on the inclusion of unregulated
flat sleep products.
With regard to in-bed sleepers, baby boxes, and compact bassinets
specifically, ASTM members, which include manufacturers of these
products, have been well aware of CPSC staff's concerns with these
products for years, based on activity on the bassinet subcommittee
which has been developing requirements for these products to include in
the bassinet standard, but has thus far been unsuccessful. With regard
to in-bed sleepers, ASTM created a separate standards development
effort for this product, which CPSC staff has participated in, and
provided incident data on the products, including notice of the
injuries and fatalities associated with these products. Indeed, through
staff's participation in the ASTM process, including attending
meetings, providing incident data, and providing comments and votes on
ballot efforts, staff's concerns with unregulated flat sleep products,
and the incident data associated with these products, is not unknown to
stakeholders and these commenters.
Comment 35: A commenter states that CPSC statutes require the
Commission to defer to voluntary standards under certain conditions,
and that CPSC's website states that CPSC follows OMB Circular A-119,
but the Commission has done neither in this case. Another commenter
states that the 2019 SNPR did not rely on the ASTM consensus-driven
process to develop a standard, and that CPSC's data cannot be presented
belatedly to ASTM participants, after or at the same time as the SNPR
was provided to the Commission. This commenter states that while CPSC
claims the process was a collaborative one, for the 2019 SNPR, the
process was not.
Response 35: Rulemaking pursuant to sections 7 and 9 of the CPSA
requires the Commission to rely on a voluntary standard, rather than
promulgate a rule, if: (1) The voluntary standard adequately addresses
the risk of injury associated with a product, and (2) there is likely
to be substantial compliance with the voluntary standard. If either of
these criteria are not met, the Commission may proceed with rulemaking
under sections 7 and 9 of the CPSA, if the Commission can make the
other required findings. Those criteria are not relevant under section
104 of the CPSIA, which requires the Commission to consult ``with
representatives of consumer groups, juvenile product manufacturers, and
independent child product engineers and experts, examine and assess the
effectiveness of any voluntary consumer product safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products,'' and to promulgate rules that are
substantially the same as the voluntary standards, or more stringent
than the voluntary standards, if the Commission finds that more
stringent standards would further reduce the risk of injury.
Although CPSC staff's standards development work through the ASTM
process can colloquially be termed ``collaborative,'' nothing in
section 104 of the CPSIA requires ``collaboration'' on a rule outside
of the rulemaking process. Under section 104, the Commission is not
required to ``defer'' to the voluntary standard, rather, the Commission
must promulgate rules, and those rules must be substantially the same
as the voluntary standard, or more stringent than the voluntary
standard, if more stringent requirements would further reduce the risk
of injury. Section 104 requires the Commission to consult regarding the
effectiveness of a voluntary standard; the Commission is not required
to consult on the timing of a proposed rule, the Commission's
enforcement work, or on the content of a proposed rule outside of the
rulemaking process. In the case of bassinets, unregulated flat sleep
products, and inclined sleep products, staff has been consulting on the
effectiveness of the voluntary standards, or lack thereof, for these
products for many years.
Generally, CPSC staff's work through the ASTM process has improved
the safety of durable infant or toddler products. However, nothing in
section 104 of the CPSIA requires the Commission to delay addressing
risks of harm to the most vulnerable infants in sleep products that
parents rely upon as a safe place for an infant, until all ASTM members
have reached a consensus on whether and how to create or revise a
voluntary standard to address the risk. The Commission would be
relinquishing the statutory mandate to protect consumers by ceding
product safety to the very industry Congress required the agency to
regulate. CPSC met the requirement to consult on the effectiveness of
the voluntary standards. The lengthy record of staff's participation
with the infant inclined sleep committee since the 2017 NPR is
available on regulations.gov, as well as through ASTM records. A
similarly robust record of staff's participation on the bassinet and
cradle committee, outside of the rulemaking process, is available
through ASTM, on CPSC's website, and through CPSC's Office of the
Secretariat.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ https://cpsc.gov/Regulations-Laws--Standards/Voluntary-Standards.
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Finally, as reviewed in response to comment 12, the final rule
addresses
[[Page 33056]]
scope and data concerns submitted by commenters on the inclusion of
unregulated flat sleep products, by specifically listing the products
included within the scope of the final rule in this preamble, reviewing
incident data and hazard patterns associated with flat products, and by
demonstrating that the requirements in the bassinet standard are
adequate to address the risk of injury associated with flat infant
sleep products. CPSC's description of the scope of the rule throughout
the 2019 SNPR and Staff's SNPR Briefing Package, and the request for
comment on these products (including a 30 day comment extension), were
sufficient to inform stakeholders that these unregulated flat sleep
products were included within the scope of the rule. Moreover, the
Commission received comments on the inclusion of flat sleep products
within the scope of the rule, demonstrating knowledge of their
inclusion.
Comment 36: A commenter states that CPSC had been participating
collaboratively with the ASTM committee for ASTM F3118 before the
summer of 2019, when the commenter states the Commission rescinded its
rulemaking to adopt ASTM F3118 as a mandatory standard, and to modify
the standard through the SNPR. The commenter states that the better
practice would be to issue an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPR) while also seeking modifications to ASTM F3118 through the ASTM
process, so that stakeholders can ``work with urgency'' toward
addressing CPSC incident data to develop a performance-based standard,
versus a design restrictive standard. The commenter also expressed
disappointment that CPSC is ``subverting'' the ASTM process, which has
a proven track record for resolving product problems. The commenter
requests that CPSC ``correct its course'' and provide the relevant data
to the ASTM committee, so that the committee can address the problems
associated with inclined sleep products through the ASTM process. The
commenter requests that CPSC hold the SNPR in abeyance while proceeding
as the commenter has suggested, with an ANPR and working through the
ASTM process.
Response 36: Although staff submitted an NPR termination package
for infant inclined sleep products to the Commission on June 12, 2019,
the Commission never voted on the termination package. Instead, the
Commission voted (5-0) on October 25, 2019 to issue the SNPR for infant
sleep products.
Generally, CPSC staff's work through the ASTM process to improve
the requirements of voluntary standards to address hazards associated
with durable infant or toddler products has improved the safety of
these products, and CPSC will continue its work through the ASTM
process. Accordingly, CPSC did not, and is not, subverting the ASTM
process to address the hazards associated with inclined and flat sleep
products. CPSC staff has been participating in the infant inclined
sleep product standards development process, as well as the bassinet
and cradle standards development committee, for many years, both before
and after the Commission issued the 2019 SNPR.
ASTM did not hold subcommittee meetings or task group meetings on
inclined sleep products or the SNPR for almost one full year after the
October 2019 ASTM meetings, and did not schedule any meetings until
after CPSC staff sent a letter to the ASTM subcommittee for infant
inclined sleep products on July 16, 2020. After staff's letter, the
ASTM F3118 subcommittee established a task group to revise the infant
inclined sleep standard's title, introduction, and scope, to be more in
line with the proposal in the 2019 SNPR. In December 2020, the ASTM
subcommittee introduced ballot F15-18 (20-1) to change the standard's
title, introduction, and scope to include all infant sleep products
(and not just inclined sleep products). A more detailed description of
this ballot is in section V.A.3 of this preamble. However, in January
2021, the ballot did not pass due to six negative votes. The ASTM F3118
subcommittee discussed the ballot results at a meeting on January 27,
2021. During this meeting, ASTM members disagreed on the intent and
consequences of changes to the voluntary standard, and the meeting
ended without a consensus on a path forward.
Based on the ballot results and the discussions in these ASTM
meetings, staff advises that it is unlikely that ASTM will be able to
move forward with changes to ASTM F3118 that address safe sleep
requirements in the near term. However, we note that a task group to
review safe sleep requirements across infant sleep product standards
(the comparison task group) has met four times since the January 27,
2021 meeting. CPSC staff has participated in all of these ASTM efforts,
including commenting on ASTM's ballot.
The December 2020 ASTM ballot to revise the title, introduction,
and scope of ASTM F3118, and the January 2021 meeting to discuss the
negatives on the ballot, demonstrate that ASTM members do not have a
consensus on moving forward to address the hazards associated with
infant sleep products, despite CPSC's 2019 SNPR and staff's continued
participation in the process. Although ASTM task groups continue to
work on revisions to the voluntary standard, staff reports that the
ASTM process is not close to completing their work, and staff was not
confident that ASTM would achieve consensus on revisions to the
standard in the near term.
In a recent ASTM task group meeting on revisions to the title,
introduction, and scope of the standard (April 22, 2021), task group
members discussed balloting the proposed regulatory text in the 2019
SNPR to replace ASTM F3118-17a, to prevent the sale of infant inclined
sleep products that purport to certify to ASTM F3118-17a, meaning
products with an incline above 10 degrees, while ASTM works to revise
the voluntary standard. However, the task group did not plan to ballot
the requirement that all infant sleep products meet the bassinet
standard, because an ASTM task group is attempting to identify minimum
safe sleep requirements that could apply to infant sleep products to
include in F3118. Staff is participating in this effort as well, but,
based on the assessment in this final rule, does not believe that
requirements that are different and less stringent than the
requirements in the bassinet standard will adequately address the risk
of injury associated with infant sleep products.
Section 104 of the CPSIA requires CPSC to consult regarding the
effectiveness of the voluntary standard; it does not require CPSC to
consult on the timing of rulemaking, the content of a rule outside the
rulemaking process, or to delay rulemaking until ASTM members achieve
consensus. Moreover, stakeholders have now had sufficient time to
consider and comment on the Mannen Study, which has been available on
CPSC's website as an attachment to Staff's SNPR Briefing Package since
October 2019, and how to address hazards associated with products
within the scope of the SNPR, through the rulemaking and the ASTM
processes. Despite having a year and a half to make progress through
the ASTM process, stakeholders have not achieved consensus on how to
move forward. When ASTM members do not have, or cannot achieve,
consensus on whether or how a voluntary standard can address associated
hazards, product safety is not improved.
The Commission's statutory mandate under section 104 of the CPSIA
is to ensure that durable infant or toddler
[[Page 33057]]
product standards provide the highest level of safety for such products
that is feasible. Accordingly, CPSC will not delay the final rule, and
section 104 of the CPSIA does not require CPSC to delay under the
circumstances.
Comment 37: A commenter states that the scope of the 2019 SNPR
includes many different types of products, with different sizes, age
capacities, breathability, firmness, geometry, perceived usage, and
different warnings. The SNPR did not explain CPSC's rationale to
include all of these products under ASTM F3118 and to conclude that all
of these products are unsafe.
Response 37: The 2019 SNPR stated that the rule applied to all
infant sleep products not subject to a CPSC sleep standard, including
products with an incline less than 10 degrees, as outlined in response
to comment 34. CPSC staff has been participating on the ASTM committees
for bassinets and infant inclined sleep for many years about the
hazards associated with products that would fall within the scope of
the final rule. The infant inclined sleep product standard and the
developing in-bed sleeper standard both evolved from the bassinet
standard, and ASTM is currently trying to create new requirements in
the bassinet standard to accommodate designs of certain flat sleep
products. Accordingly, as provided in response to comment 36 regarding
staff's efforts through the ASTM process, stakeholders understand the
scope of products addressed in the 2019 SNPR and the final rule, ASTM's
efforts to modify the bassinet requirements to accommodate these
products, and CPSC staff's objection to modification of the safe sleep
requirements in the bassinet standard. To address comments on the 2019
SNPR, the final rule includes additional incident data and analysis to
demonstrate that the performance and labeling requirements of the
bassinet standard would address the risk of injury associated with
currently unregulated flat and inclined sleep products.
Comment 38: A commenter states that CPSC followed the process set
forth in section 104 of the CPSIA when it issued the 2017 NPR to
incorporate by reference into a mandatory rule, ASTM F3118. The
commenter notes that the NPR was substantially the same as the
voluntary standard, and that CPSC staff consulted with representatives
from consumer groups, juvenile product manufacturers, and independent
child product engineers and experts, to examine and assess the
effectiveness of ASTM F3118, as required by section 104 of the CPSIA.
The commenter states, however, that the 2019 SNPR for infant sleep
products did not meet these two requirements in the CPSIA. Instead of
consulting with consumer groups, manufacturers, and product safety
experts through the section 104 process, CPSC staff ``informed''
stakeholders about the Commission's change in direction at the October
2019 ASTM committee meetings, after the SNPR was already issued.
Moreover, although CPSC staff remains engaged in the ASTM F3118
subcommittee, their engagement is in support of the SNPR. The commenter
maintains that the 2019 SNPR was not a collaborative effort, and that
CPSC did not consult with stakeholders before issuing the SNPR. The
commenter states: ``The stakeholder community, impacted and potentially
impacted manufacturers, are in the very unfortunate position of being
subject to a mandatory rule that they had no part in helping to craft,
by way of the ASTM development process.'' The commenter also suggests
that CPSC staff has acted in an ``ultra vires manner to sanitize from
incline sleep products'' that are otherwise subject to an existing
standard and to the rulemaking. The commenter recommends that the
Commission issue another SNPR to clarify the scope of the rulemaking
and evaluate and mitigate any unintended consequences, and to allow
time for stakeholders and CPSC staff to work through the ASTM process
to examine the impact of the proposed rule. Another commenter similarly
urges the Commission to proceed in accordance with section 104 of the
CPSIA by working with ASTM to develop a standard with a clearly defined
scope, clear definitions, and creation of performance requirements
based on specific product types within the infant sleep product
category. This approach would require working with ASTM, and then
reissuing an SNPR, before proceeding with a final rule.
Response 38: Section 104(b)(1) of the CPSIA requires the Commission
to: ``(A) in consultation with representatives of consumer groups,
juvenile product manufacturers, and independent child product engineers
and experts, examine and assess the effectiveness of any voluntary
consumer product safety standards for durable infant or toddler
products;'' and (B) in accordance with the informal notice and comment
rulemaking requirements under section 553 of the Administrative
Procedures Act (APA), ``promulgate consumer product safety standards
that--(i) are substantially the same as such voluntary standards; or
(ii) are more stringent than such voluntary standards, if the
Commission determines that more stringent standards would further
reduce the risk of injury associated with such products.''
The regulated community participates in the rulemaking process by
commenting on a proposed rule. Neither section 104 of the CPSIA nor the
APA requires that stakeholders craft a CPSC mandatory rule. CPSC is
required to consult regarding the effectiveness of the voluntary
standard and to promulgate rules. As set forth in section V.A.3 and
V.B.2 of this preamble, CPSC staff has been consulting about the
effectiveness of the voluntary standards at issue, infant inclined
sleep products and bassinets and cradles, for many years, through
participation with the relevant ASTM subcommittees and task groups. For
example, since ASTM began development of an infant inclined sleep
product standard in or around 2011, CPSC has participated in the
development of the standard. Similarly, CPSC staff has participated in
the development and revisions to the bassinet and cradle standard since
at least 2002. For both standards, CPSC staff has provided incident
data, participated in subcommittee and task group meetings, and
submitted comments and/or votes on ASTM ballots. For this final rule,
CPSC has reviewed the incident data, hazard patterns, and the adequacy
of the voluntary standards to address the risk of injury associated
with products within the scope of the final rule, unregulated inclined
and flat sleep products, and is promulgating a rule that is more
stringent than the voluntary standard, as proposed in the 2019 SNPR, to
further reduce the risk of injury associated with infant sleep
products.
ASTM members have now had ample time to consider the hazards
associated with infant sleep products, to comment on the SNPR, and to
address associated hazards through revised voluntary standards. ASTM is
still working on these issues and staff will continue working with ASTM
to develop a voluntary standard that addresses the risk of injury
associated with infant sleep products. If and when ASTM has revised
ASTM F3118-17a, it may send the revised standard to CPSC to evaluate,
through the update process set forth in section 104 of the CPSIA.
Comment 39: Commenters allege that the 2019 SNPR represents an
unprecedented effort by CPSC to issue a mandatory rule that would
create a pre-market testing and approval process for an entire product
category. Commenters state that creating an omnibus rule that requires
infant sleep
[[Page 33058]]
products to meet the bassinet standard, instead of creating product
specific standards, would have the unintended consequence of stifling
innovation.
Response 39: As with all of CPSC's regulations to set performance
and labeling requirements, CPSC's mandatory rules for durable infant or
toddler products set a floor for safe consumer products. CPSC does not
require pre-market approval of consumer products, nor does the agency
have the authority to do so. However, CPSC does have the authority to
create mandatory performance requirements through rulemaking, and to
require that all products offered for sale in the United States meet
these requirements to protect consumers from injuries or death. When
the Commission is aware of a gap in the regulatory framework for infant
sleep products, the Commission can use its authority to address the
associated hazards.
Mandating a safety standard for infant sleep products offered for
sale in the United States that are not already within the scope of
another CPSC sleep standard is not ``unprecedented'' and is no
different than standards for other durable infant or toddler products
that contain different product types within the same standard, such as
strollers and high chairs, each of which include a variety of product
types. No company can sell a stroller in the United States that does
not comply with the stroller standard, simply based on the type of
stroller. Similarly, no company can sell a high chair in the United
States unless it complies with the high chair standard. This is not a
novel idea. The only difference in these product categories is how the
voluntary standards evolved. The scope of the stroller and high chair
standards are broad for the purpose of encapsulating all products.
Standards for sleep products evolved on a different track. But the
Commission is not required to continue a patchwork regulatory scheme
that does not serve the interests of consumer safety. In this case, the
Commission seeks to ensure that all products marketed or intended for
infant sleep, for infants up to 5 months of age, meet the infant sleep
product standard to set a floor for safe infant sleep. CPSC's mission
is to protect consumers, and the agency will use its authority to
protect the most vulnerable infants, up to 5 months old, and their
unsuspecting parents, from sleep surfaces that do not follow known safe
sleep principles, as set forth in the existing CPSC sleep standards.
Accordingly, the Commission's effort in the 2019 SNPR is consistent
with CPSC's statutory mandate to protect consumers, and specifically,
under section 104, to promulgate standards for product categories that
the Commission determines to be of the highest priority, and to ensure
that such standards provide the highest level of safety for such
products that is feasible.
Because CPSC staff has been working with ASTM members on the
bassinet and cradle subcommittee for years, on both inclined sleep
products, as well as unregulated flat infant sleep products, ASTM
members should be well aware of staff's efforts and concerns with both
product types. Once CPSC issues an NPR, CPSC's docket on
Regulations.gov includes a record of staff's participation through the
ASTM process, and ASTM records should reflect this participation as
well. CPSC's Office of the Secretariat maintains meeting logs
summarizing staff's participation with external parties, such as ASTM,
outside of the rulemaking process, and these meeting logs are
searchable on CPSC's website.
Finally, performance and labeling requirements for consumer
products allow for innovation with certain baseline safety
requirements. While we understand the concerns that innovation beyond
the baseline safety requirements may be discouraged, we note the
development of infant inclined sleep products as a prime example of
innovation preceding safety. Infant inclined sleep products were first
marketed as an innovative sleep solution for parents; however, no
safety standard existed for these products when they were introduced to
the market. Commenters to the 2010 NPR and 2012 SNPR for bassinets
indicated that hammocks and inclined sleep products should have their
own standard because they could not meet the requirements for
bassinets, and parents were likely to create their own ``unsafe''
alternative if a regulated product was not available. The ASTM
standards development process for inclined sleep products took many
years before the standard was published in 2015, and during that time,
manufacturers were designing and selling innovative inclined products.
As time went on, the hazards posed by inclined products became apparent
in the accumulation of infant deaths and incidents associated with this
product category. To avoid a repeat of this process, involving the most
vulnerable infants up to 5 months old, the Commission is issuing this
infant sleep product standard that contains key elements of safe sleep,
so that product innovation does not compromise safe sleep for infants
up to 5 months old.
Comment 40: A commenter states that section 104 of the CPSIA does
not permit the application of the bassinet standard to an open-ended
and undefined scope of products. The commenter contends that section
104 requires the Commission to consider specific product types,
characteristics, and hazards. The commenter states that the 2019 SNPR
approach is ``arbitrary'' and ``is a reversal of the Section 104
process'' for existing and new products that are sleep products, but
not bassinets or cradles. The commenter states that CPSC must clearly
define the scope of the rule and the products that fall within the
scope of the rule.
Response 40: As set forth in response to comment 34, the 2019 SNPR
provided notice that the rulemaking included flat infant sleep
products. Moreover, the preamble to this final rule identifies product
types that fall within the scope of the rule, as well incident data,
hazard patterns, and an analysis of how the requirements in the
bassinet and cradle standard address the risk of injury associated with
flat infant sleep products. The purpose of the rule is to regulate any
product marketed or intended as a sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to five months old that is not already regulated by another CPSC
sleep standard. Accordingly, the scope of the rule is not ``open-
ended,'' and the final rule demonstrates that the bassinet standard
provides minimum safe sleep characteristics for these infant sleep
products.
Comment 41: A commenter states that to implement a rule that
requires specific products to meet the requirements of the bassinet
standard, CPSC must provide a rationale that is supported by
``substantial evidence.'' The commenter states that the 2019 SNPR did
not provide a rationale for the application of the bassinet standard to
specific products within the infant sleep product category.
Response 41: As stated in response to comment 37, CPSC and
stakeholders have been working through the ASTM process regarding
requirements for unregulated flat and inclined sleep products for many
years, as part of development of the bassinet standard. Accordingly,
based on the 2019 SNPR and this ongoing work with ASTM, staff's efforts
have been to maintain the safe sleep requirements in the bassinet
standard and apply them to all sleep products marketed and intended for
infants up to 5 months old. In response to comments, the final rule
makes clearer the unregulated flat sleep products that fall within the
scope of the rule, provides incident data, identifies hazard patterns,
analyzes the effectiveness of the bassinet standard to address the
hazards, and compares the
[[Page 33059]]
performance requirements in international standards to demonstrate that
products within the scope of the final rule have similar hazard
patterns that can be addressed by the requirements in the bassinet
standard.
Comment 42: A commenter states that the Commission previously
recognized the importance of product specificity in promulgating the
consumer registration rule, 16 CFR part 1130. Despite this, the
commenter states that the 2019 SNPR failed to discuss which product
types would be considered ``durable infant or toddler products'' for
product registration card purposes, and ``simply concludes in a
circular fashion that infant sleep products are durable infant or
toddler products.'' The commenter believes that a specific rationale is
required for each product to ``independently qualify'' as a durable
infant or toddler product. The commenter concludes that under the APA,
CPSC must specifically define products that fall within an ``infant
sleep product'' in another SNPR before it can issue a final rule.
Response 42: The preamble for the final rule identifies product
types that fall within the scope of the rule. However, the 2019 SNPR
and the final rule purposely do not define product types by name in the
regulation text, and instead identify product types by purpose and age
limit, to ensure that all infant sleep products meet minimum safe sleep
requirements in the bassinet standard, including existing products and
future products.
Section 104(f)(1) of the CPSIA does not require any further product
type specificity to identify these products as durable infant or
toddler products. The statute defines a durable infant or toddler
product as ``a durable product intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by children under the age of 5 years''
and then provides a list of products that are durable infant or toddler
products. The Commission's implementing rule at 16 CFR 1130.2(a)
states:
DEFINITION OF DURABLE INFANT OR TODDLER PRODUCT means the
following products intended for use, or that may be reasonably
expected to be used, by children under the age of 5 years. The
listed product categories are further defined in the applicable
standards that the Commission issues under section 104(b) of the
Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, and include
products that are combinations of the following product categories .
. .
Based on this definition in part 1130, a product marketed or
intended as a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months old
is a durable infant or toddler product. Because the products are
intended for infants up to 5 months old, the products are ``intended
for use,'' and ``reasonably expected to be used,'' by children under 5
years old. Products intended for infant sleep are similar to products
on the statutory list intended for infant sleep, such as cribs, and
bassinets and cradles. Additionally, ``infant sleep products'' are
further defined in the final rule. Accordingly, adding ``infant sleep
products'' as a durable infant or toddler product is consistent with
the Commission's approach of adding a durable infant or toddler product
category with a mandatory standard to the list of products in part
1130, to clarify that these products must meet the consumer
registration rule, and the testing and certification requirements for
durable infant or toddler products.
Comment 43: A commenter contends that the creation of specific
types of infant sleep products is not by the Commission's choice, but
required by section 104 of the CPSIA. The commenter states that
Congress purposely listed different types of infant sleep products
separately in section 104, because ``differences between these products
warrant individual consideration in any rulemaking proceeding,'' and
that this principle is true with the remaining infant sleep product
types.
Response 43: The commenter offers no legislative history to support
the idea that Congress listed sleep products separately because product
differences warranted individual rulemaking proceedings. The products
listed as durable infant or toddler products are examples of durable
infant or toddler products that Congress expected the Commission to
regulate by issuing a mandatory standard. Most of these products had
existing voluntary standards in 2008 when Congress passed the CPSIA.
Congress gave CPSC the authority to add products to the list of durable
infant or toddler products, gave CPSC the mission to protect consumers,
and instructed CPSC to ``periodically review and revise the standards
set forth under this subsection to ensure that such standards provide
the highest level of safety for such products that is feasible.''
Flat sleep products that are subject to the final rule are not
currently defined or covered by any existing ASTM standard. If CPSC
could not use its authority to expand the scope of a rule to include
such products, especially when staff's analysis demonstrates that the
existing bassinets and cradles standard would address the risk of
injury associated with such products, ASTM could dictate when and if
durable infant or toddler products are regulated by CPSC. Similarly,
when products fall within an ASTM standard, CPSC should not be bound by
ASTM's categorization of such products if CSPC can demonstrate that the
voluntary standard is inadequate to address the risk of injury
associated with the products, but another voluntary standard would be
adequate.
Comment 44: A commenter states that CPSC must not only specifically
identify product types that fall within the infant sleep product
category, but must also provide the rationale for applying the bassinet
and cradle standard requirements to each product type within the
category, as well as establishing the product type is a durable infant
or toddler product. The commenter contends that this analysis must
identify the specific characteristics for each product type and the
related hazards, to describe how the bassinet standard would address
each hazard pattern. The commenter contends that a requirement that may
be applicable to one product type may not be applicable to another
product type. The commenter contends that ``[n]o broad product category
to date has ever been subject to a rule without such specificity.'' The
commenter states this level of specificity is required to avoid banning
existing safe products or chilling future innovation.
Response 44: As set forth in response to comment 34, the 2019 SNPR
provided notice that the rulemaking included flat infant sleep
products, and multiple other efforts, including those at ASTM,
reinforced this. In response to comments, the preamble to this final
rule provides further clarity, identifying product types that fall
within the scope of the rule, including inclined and flat sleep
products, as well associated incident data and hazard patterns. This
final rule also provides an analysis demonstrating that the
requirements of the bassinet standard are adequate to address each risk
of injury associated with infant sleep products, both flat and inclined
product types. As set forth in response to comment 39, we disagree that
a rule under section 104 of the CPSIA cannot have a scope that is
broader than one product type. For example, many types of carriages and
strollers fall within the Safety Standard for Carriage and Strollers.
Strollers offered for sale in the United States must meet the
requirements in this regulation, regardless of product type.
The Commission's statutory mandate under section 104 of the CPSIA
is to ensure that durable infant or toddler product standards provide
the highest level of safety for such products that is
[[Page 33060]]
feasible. Congress specifically included five products intended for
infant sleep in the statutory list of durable infant or toddler
products (full-size cribs, non-full-size cribs, play yards, and
bassinets and cradles), demonstrating intent for CPSC to regulate such
products. Currently, multiple flat and inclined sleep products are not
subject to a CPSC regulation, but CPSC has the authority to add
``infant sleep products'' as a durable infant or toddler product, and
to regulate this product category. Accordingly, the final rule
regulates any product marketed or intended as a sleeping accommodation
for an infant up to 5 months old, that is not already regulated by
another CPSC sleep standard. In response to comments, the final rule
expands the justification from the 2019 SNPR to demonstrate that the
bassinet standard provides the minimum safe sleep characteristics for
these infant sleep products. Finally, the scope of the final rule is
well-defined, and allows a manufacturer to intentionally design and
market a product as an infant sleep product, or to choose not to design
and market a product as an infant sleep product.
VIII. Final Rule Establishing a Safety Standard for Infant Sleep
Products
This final rule establishes a children's product safety standard
for infant sleep products as a type of durable infant or toddler
product under section 104 of the CPSIA. The Mannen Study and CPSC
staff's analysis of the incident reports, hazard patterns, and adequacy
of the voluntary standard, demonstrate that ASTM F3118-17a is
inadequate to address the risk of injury associated with inclined sleep
products. ASTM F3118-17a is inadequate to address the risk of injury
associated with inclined sleep products, because it allows products
with a seat back angle greater than 10 degrees, and does not address
additional hazard patterns associated with inclined sleep products,
such as containing the infant. The Commission determines that more
stringent requirements are necessary in the mandatory standard to
further reduce the risk of injury associated with inclined sleep
products. Staff's assessment in the 2019 SNPR, and section VI of this
preamble, demonstrate that the performance requirements in the current
voluntary standard for bassinets and cradles, ASTM F2194, which is
incorporated into the Commission's mandatory standard, 16 CFR part
1218, is adequate to address the risk of injury associated with infant
inclined sleep products, and will further reduce the risk of injury
associated with inclined sleep products.
As proposed in the 2019 SNPR, the definition of an ``infant sleep
product'' in the final rule also includes flat sleep products, such as
in-bed sleepers, baby boxes, compact bassinets, and baby tents, which
currently do not fall within the scope of any voluntary or mandatory
standard. Staff's assessment of the incident reports and hazard
patterns associated with flat sleep products in this final rule
demonstrates that the risk of injury and death associated with flat
sleep products are similar, and can be addressed by meeting the
requirements in the current voluntary standard for bassinets and
cradles, ASTM F2194, which is incorporated into the Commission's
mandatory standard, 16 CFR part 1218.
Accordingly, the final rule incorporates by reference ASTM F3118-
17a as the mandatory standard for infant sleep products, both inclined
and flat, with the following modifications to the voluntary standard:
Revise the introduction of the standard, to state the
purpose of the standard is to address infant sleep products not already
covered by traditional sleep product standards, to reduce deaths
associated with known sleep hazards, including but not limited to, a
seat back or sleep surface angle that is greater than 10 degrees from
the horizontal. This requirement is intended to broaden the purpose of
the standard to more clearly address inclined and flat sleep products,
including known hazards associated with infant sleep.
Revise the scope of the standard, to remove the term
``inclined'' and broaden the scope to include infant sleep products,
including inclined and flat sleep surfaces, marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months old, and
that are not already subject to a mandatory CPSC sleep standard:
[cir] 16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
incorporating by reference ASTM F2194, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bassinets and Cradles;
[cir] 16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs,
incorporating by reference ASTM F1169, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
[cir] 16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby
Cribs, incorporating by reference applicable requirements in ASTM F406,
Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs/
Play Yards;
[cir] 16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards,
incorporating by reference applicable requirements in ASTM F406,
Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs/
Play Yards;
[cir] 16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers,
incorporating by reference ASTM F2906, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bedside Sleepers.
The purpose of this revision is to more clearly establish the scope
of the final rule, which includes all products marketed or intended for
infant sleep for children up to 5 months of age, so that these products
that are currently unregulated must now meet one of the mandatory
standards for infant sleep.
Revise the scope of the standard to explicitly state that
crib mattresses that meet the requirements of ASTM F2933 do not fall
within the scope of the standard. This exclusion clarifies that crib
mattresses that meet the voluntary standard do not meet the definition
of an infant sleep product, and are always used in conjunction with a
sleep product, such as a crib or play yard, that falls within one of
CPSC's sleep standards. The final rule also modifies referenced
documents in the standard, to add the voluntary standard for crib
mattresses, ASTM F2933;
Modify the definition of ``infant inclined sleep product''
to remove the term ``inclined'' and revise the definition to state that
an ``infant sleep product'' is ``a product marketed or intended to
provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age,
and that is not subject to any of the following:
[cir] 16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles
[cir] 16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs
[cir] 16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs
[cir] 16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards
[cir] 16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers
This requirement aligns the definition of ``infant sleep product'' with
the scope of the rule, including the intent of the rule to ensure that
all infant sleep products, inclined and flat, are subject to a
mandatory CPSC sleep standard, to address the risk of injury associated
with infant sleep products.
Remove the definitions of accessory, compact, and newborn
inclined sleep products because they are no longer necessary and have
no unique requirements in the standard, because all infant sleep
products are subsumed under the definition of ``infant sleep product.''
Modify seat back/sleep surface angle so the maximum
allowable angle, as tested per the rule, must be equal to
[[Page 33061]]
or less than 10 degrees from horizontal in all positions recommended
for sleep. Although the bassinet standard also requires a sleep surface
equal to or less than 10 degrees, the bassinet standard does not have a
test for the sleep surface angle. Accordingly, infant sleep products
are required to test for the sleep surface angle, in addition to
meeting the bassinet standard.
Add a new requirement that infant sleep products must meet
16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, including
conforming to the definition of bassinet/cradle. As the final rule
analysis demonstrates, conforming to the requirements in the bassinet
standard addresses the risk of injury associated with infant sleep
products. Requiring products to meet the definition of a bassinet/
cradle also ensures that the products meet the requirement to have a
stand.
Remove all the performance requirements except for the
above new or modified requirements.
Remove all test methods except for maximum seat back/sleep
surface angle.
The name of CPSC's final rule does not include the term
``inclined,'' and will be codified as 16 CFR part 1236, Safety Standard
for Infant Sleep Products. Finally, as proposed in the 2019 SNPR,
because infant sleep products must meet the bassinet standard, infant
sleep products must also meet the warning requirements in the bassinet
and cradle standard, instead of those stated in ASTM F3118-17a. 84 FR
at 60956-57. An Appendix to Tab C of Staff's Final Rule Briefing
Package contains a redline of the final rule changes, compared to the
requirements in ASTM F3118-17a.
IX. Amendment to 16 CFR Part 1112 To Include NOR for Infant Sleep
Products
The CPSA establishes certain requirements for product certification
and testing. Products subject to a consumer product safety rule under
the CPSA, or to a similar rule, ban, standard or regulation under any
other act enforced by the Commission, must be certified as complying
with all applicable CPSC-enforced requirements. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a).
Certification of children's products subject to a children's product
safety rule must be based on testing conducted by a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body. Id. 2063(a)(2). The Commission must
publish an NOR for the accreditation of third party conformity
assessment bodies to assess conformity with a children's product safety
rule to which a children's product is subject. Id. 2063(a)(3).
The Commission published a final rule, Requirements Pertaining to
Third Party Conformity Assessment Bodies, 78 FR 15836 (March 12, 2013),
codified at 16 CFR part 1112 (``part 1112'') and effective on June 10,
2013, which establishes requirements for accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to test for conformity with a children's
product safety rule in accordance with section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA.
Part 1112 also codifies all of the NORs issued previously by the
Commission.
All new NORs for new children's product safety rules, such as the
infant sleep products standard, require an amendment to part 1112.
Accordingly, the 2019 SNPR proposed to amend the existing rule that
codifies the list of all NORs issued by the Commission, 16 CFR part
1112, to add 16 CFR part 1236, Standard Consumer Safety Specification
for Infant Sleep Products, to the list of children's product safety
rules for which CPSC has issued an NOR, because a final rule would be a
children's product safety rule that requires third party testing by a
CPSC-accepted third party conformity assessment body. 84 FR at 60957.
The Commission received no comment on the proposed amendment, and is
finalizing the amendment as proposed in the SNPR.
Test laboratories applying for acceptance as a CPSC-accepted third
party conformity assessment body to test to the new standard for infant
sleep products are required to meet the third party conformity
assessment body accreditation requirements in part 1112. When a
laboratory meets the requirements as a CPSC-accepted third party
conformity assessment body, the laboratory can apply to CPSC to have 16
CFR part 1236, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Infant Sleep
Products, included in the laboratory's scope of accreditation of CPSC
safety rules listed for the laboratory on CPSC's website at:
www.cpsc.gov/labsearch. Part 1236 includes one performance test to
check for a seat back/sleep surface angle that is 10 degrees or less,
and then requires infant sleep products to meet 16 CFR part 1218,
Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles.
The new 16 CFR part 1236 for infant sleep products should have
sufficient testing capacity by the effective date of the final rule.
The test to check the sleep surface angle required in part 1236
involves use of the ``Hinged Weight Gage--Infant'' identified in F3118-
17a. Because the gage is also used for testing to the 16 CFR part 1223,
Safety Standard for Infant Swings (incorporating by reference ASTM
F2088), labs conducting infant swing testing will already have the
gage. Staff advises that 33 labs are currently CPSC-accepted to test to
the bassinet and cradle standard. Of these 33, 19 of the labs are also
accredited to test to the infant swings standard, meaning these labs
have all of the test equipment required to test to the new part 1236.
These labs should be able to more easily become accredited to test to
part 1236. Also, labs that already test to part 1218 bassinets, must
only acquire the test gage, which staff advises is manufactured with
readily available metal and is estimated to cost $800. Moreover, labs
that previously tested to the current ASTM F3118-17a for the JPMA
certification program have the gage, because F3118 contains a test to
measure the seat back angle using the gage. Finally, the effective date
of this final rule is 12 months from publication in the Federal
Register. Accordingly, labs seeking to become accredited to part 1236
have a full year to obtain the necessary test equipment, become ISO
accredited, and have CPSC-accept their accreditation to test to part
1236.
The Commission certified in the 2019 SNPR that the proposed NOR for
infant sleep products would not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small laboratories. 84 FR 60959. CPSC expects
that laboratories that are already accredited to test to the bassinet
and cradle standard will find it relatively easy to become accredited
to test to this standard, because the primary substantive requirement
added by this standard is the sleep surface angle. Moreover, CPSC did
not receive any comments regarding the NOR. Therefore, for the final
rule, the Commission continues to certify that amending part 1112 to
include the NOR for the infant sleep products final rule will not have
a significant impact on a substantial number of small laboratories.
X. Amendment to Definitions in Consumer Registration Rule
The statutory definition of ``durable infant or toddler product''
in section 104(f) applies to all of section 104 of the CPSIA. In
addition to requiring the Commission to issue safety standards for
durable infant or toddler products, section 104 of the CPSIA also
directed the Commission to issue a rule requiring that manufacturers of
durable infant or toddler products establish a program for consumer
registration of those products. Section 104(d) of the CPSIA.
In 2009, the Commission issued a rule implementing the consumer
registration requirement. 16 CFR part 1130. As the CPSIA directs, the
consumer registration rule requires each manufacturer of a
[[Page 33062]]
durable infant or toddler product to: Provide a postage-paid consumer
registration form with each product; keep records of consumers who
register their products with the manufacturer; and permanently place
the manufacturer's name and certain other identifying information on
the product. When the Commission issued the consumer registration rule,
the Commission identified six additional products as ``durable infant
or toddler products'' to add to the statutory list in section 104(f)(2)
of the CPSIA:
[ssquf] children's folding chairs
[ssquf] changing tables;
[ssquf] infant bouncers;
[ssquf] infant bathtubs;
[ssquf] bed rails; and
[ssquf] infant slings.
16 CFR 1130.2. The Commission stated that the specified statutory
categories were not exclusive, but that the Commission should
explicitly identify the product categories that are covered. The
preamble to the 2009 final consumer registration rule states: ``Because
the statute has a broad definition of a durable infant or toddler
product but also includes 12 specific product categories, additional
items can and should be included in the definition, but should also be
specifically listed in the rule.'' 74 FR 68668, 68669 (Dec. 29, 2009).
In the SNPR, the Commission proposed to amend the definition of
``durable infant or toddler product'' in the consumer registration rule
to clarify that ``infant sleep products'' fall within the term
``durable infant or toddler product'' as a subset of bassinets and
cradles, and must comply with the consumer registration rule and
section 104 of the CPSIA. CPSC received a comment stating that the SNPR
failed to discuss which product types would be considered ``durable
infant or toddler products'' for product registration card purposes,
and ``simply concludes in a circular fashion that infant sleep products
are durable infant or toddler products.'' The commenter believes that a
specific rationale is required for each product to ``independently
qualify'' as a durable infant or toddler product. The commenter
concludes that under the APA, the Commission must specifically define
products that fall within an ``infant sleep product'' in another SNPR
before it can issue a final rule.
We disagree with the commenter and finalize the amendment to part
1130, as proposed in the 2019 SNPR, to include ``infant sleep
products'' as a durable infant or toddler product, as a subcategory of
bassinets and cradles. Based on the definition of a ``durable infant or
toddler product'' in section 104(f) of the CPSIA, and in Sec. 1130.2,
which define the term as products ``intended for use, or that may be
reasonably expected to be used, by children under the age of 5 years,''
``infant sleep products'' are a durable infant or toddler product.
``Infant sleep products'' are defined in the final rule as a product
marketed or intended as a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5
months old. Accordingly, the products are ``intended for use,'' and
``reasonably expected to be used,'' by children under 5 years old.
Moreover, products intended for infant sleep are similar to products on
the statutory list intended for infant sleep, such as cribs, bassinets
and cradles. Moreover, ``infant sleep products'' are further defined in
the final rule. Finally, as discussed in section V of this preamble,
the Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products, for both inclined and
flat sleep products, is an outgrowth of efforts to develop a safety
standard for bassinets and cradles, and may be considered a subcategory
of bassinets. To provide greater clarity that inclined sleep products
are durable infant or toddler products subject to the consumer
registration rule, as well as third party testing and certification
requirements for durable infant or toddler products, the Commission
finalizes the amendment to 16 CFR 1130.2(a)(12), as proposed, to
explicitly include ``infant sleep products'' as a subcategory of
bassinets and cradles.
XI. Incorporation by Reference
Section 1236.2(a) of the final rule provides that each infant sleep
product must comply with applicable provisions of ASTM F3118-17a. The
Office of the Federal Register (OFR) has regulations concerning
incorporation by reference. 1 CFR part 51. For a final rule, agencies
must discuss in the preamble to the rule the way in which materials
that the agency incorporates by reference are reasonably available to
interested persons, and how interested parties can obtain the
materials. Additionally, the preamble to the rule must summarize the
material. 1 CFR 51.5(b).
In accordance with the OFR's requirements, sections VI.A and VIII
of this preamble summarize the provisions of ASTM F3118-17a that the
Commission is incorporating by reference. ASTM F3118-17a is
copyrighted. Before the effective date of this rule, you may view a
copy of ASTM F3118-17a at: https://www.astm.org/cpsc.htm. Once the rule
becomes effective, ASTM F3118-17a can be viewed free of charge as a
read-only document at: https://www.astm.org/READINGLIBRARY/. To
download or print the standard, interested persons may purchase a copy
of ASTM F3118-17a from ASTM, through its website (https://www.astm.org),
or by mail from ASTM International, 100 Bar Harbor Drive, P.O. Box
0700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428; https://www.astm.org. Alternatively,
interested parties may inspect a copy of the standard free of charge by
contacting Alberta E. Mills, Division of the Secretariat, U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission, 4330 East-West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: 301-504-7479; email: [email protected].
XII. Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) generally requires that the
effective date of a rule be at least 30 days after publication of the
final rule. 5 U.S.C. 553(d). CPSC generally considers 6 months to be
sufficient time for suppliers of durable infant and toddler products to
come into compliance with a new standard under section 104 of the
CPSIA. Six months is also the period that the Juvenile Products
Manufacturers Association (JPMA) typically allows for products in the
JPMA certification program to transition to a new standard once that
standard is published.
The 2019 SNPR proposed 12-month effective date after publication of
the final rule, for products manufactured or imported on or after that
date, because: (1) the Commission was proposing to incorporate by
reference, ASTM F3118-17a, a relatively new voluntary standard that
covers a variety of products whose manufacturers may not be aware that
their product must comply; and (2) the Commission proposed to make
substantial modifications to ASTM F3118-17a, and a 12-month effective
date would allow time for infant sleep product manufacturers to bring
their products into compliance after a final rule is issued. 84 FR
60958. The 2019 SNPR stated that the Commission expects that most firms
should be able to comply within the 12-month timeframe. The 2019 SNPR
also requested comment on the proposed 12-month effective date, because
of the hazards involved with infant inclined sleep products, and stated
that the final rule could issue with a shorter effective date, so that
safer products would be available sooner. Id.
The 2019 SNPR commenters both supported and opposed the 12-month
effective date. Some commenters supported a 6-month effective date,
urging that additional time for the rule to become effective puts
infants at risk.
[[Page 33063]]
Other commenters requested a longer effective date, or an indefinite
delay of the rulemaking, until ASTM completes additional standards for
specific products covered by the final rule.
For the final rule, the Commission will maintain the 2019 SNPR
proposed effective date of 12 months after the date of publication in
the Federal Register. Accordingly, as of the effective date of the
final rule, it is unlawful to ``sell, offer for sale, manufacture for
sale, distribute in commerce, or import into the United States,'' any
infant sleep product, as defined in the rule, that is not in conformity
with the final rule. 15 U.S.C. 2068(a)(1).
A 6-month effective date may seem reasonable because suppliers have
had ample lead time to prepare for this rule since the SNPR was
published in 2019, and many of the products within the scope of the
final rule have been withdrawn from the market or redesigned,
particularly for inclined sleep products. However, some manufacturers
of flat sleep products that remain in the market will likely experience
a significant economic impact as a result of this final rule. While
some suppliers can reduce the impact of this rule by relabeling their
products as not for infant sleep, not all manufacturers can simply
remarket the product if the physical form of the product demonstrates
that it is intended for sleep. For some of these products,
manufacturers could relabel them as intended for infants older than
five months, or, in some cases, for pets. However, the demand for
infant sleep products for pet use is probably limited. Accordingly,
maintaining the proposed 12-month effective date will provide
manufacturers and importers time to spread the impact of the rule over
a 12 month time period, to reduce the economic impact of the final
rule.
XIII. Regulatory Flexibility Act
A. Introduction
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, requires
that agencies review a proposed rule and a final rule for the rule's
potential economic impact on small entities, including small
businesses. Section 604 of the RFA generally requires that agencies
prepare a final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) when
promulgating final rules, unless the head of the agency certifies that
the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Staff prepared a FRFA that is available at
Tab E of Staff's Final Rule Briefing Package.
The scope of this FRFA and the number of firms impacted is
different from the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) that
accompanied the 2017 NPR, because the scope of the NPR was inclined
sleep products, while the scope of the final rule is infant sleep
products, defined in the final rule as products that are marketed or
intended to provide sleeping accommodations for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that are not already covered by a mandatory CPSC
sleep standard: Full-size cribs, non-full-size cribs, play yards,
bassinets and cradles, or bedside sleepers. This change in scope from
the proposed rule was specified in the 2019 SNPR, and includes inclined
and non-inclined (flat) infant sleep products. Some inclined sleep
products have been recalled or otherwise voluntarily removed from the
market since 2019, so some firms that were forecast to be impacted in
the IRFA are not likely to be impacted by this final rule, because the
firms have already stopped selling those products. However, a
significant economic impact is possible for suppliers of flat sleep
products that were not analyzed in the IRFA, as well as remaining
suppliers of inclined products. Flat sleep products without inclined
sleep surfaces include: Baby boxes, compact and travel bassinets that
do not meet the bassinet standard, in-bed sleepers, baby tents marketed
for infant sleep, baby pods, and baby nests.
Pursuant to the final rule, firms whose infant sleep products do
not comply with any CPSC sleep standard will need to evaluate their
products, determine what changes would be required to meet an existing
CPSC standard, or 16 CFR part 1218, the Safety Standard for Bassinets
and Cradles, and decide how to proceed. Noncompliant products would
need to be removed from the U.S. market, modified to meet the mandatory
standard as specified in this final rule, remarketed for children older
than 5 months, or remarketed as not intended for infant sleep. New
infant sleep products introduced to the market would also need to
comply with the standard, or one of the other CPSC sleep standards. The
final rule defines an ``infant sleep product'' as a product marketed or
intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5
months of age, and that does not already meet a mandatory CPSC sleep
standard. CPSC interprets this definition to include products that are
marketed for ``napping,'' ``snoozing,'' ``dreaming,'' or any other word
that implies sleeping, or that are called a ``bed,'' and items marketed
with a picture of a sleeping infant, to be an infant sleep product.
Based on the staff's analysis, the Commission anticipates a
possible significant economic impact for twelve small importers and
nine small domestic manufacturers that supply infant sleep products to
the U.S. market, as well as for hundreds of home-based small businesses
that ship from the U.S. We provide a summary of the FRFA below.
B. The Market for Infant Sleep Products
Section II of this preamble describes the infant sleep products
within the scope of the final rule, the products excluded from the
final rule, and a description of the market for infant sleep products,
including a summary of retail prices for various types of infant sleep
products.
C. Products and Small Entities to Which the Final Rule Would Apply
1. Overview of Products Covered by, and Excluded From, the Final Rule
Section II.A and B of this preamble describe the products subject
to, and excluded from, the final rule. This rule is intended to cover
``infant sleep products,'' defined in the final rule as products that
are marketed or intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for an
infant up to 5 months of age, and that are not already covered by a
mandatory CPSC sleep standard: Full-size cribs, non-full-size cribs,
play yards, bassinets and cradles, or bedside sleepers. A detailed
description of the products covered by the final rule is set forth in
section II.C of this preamble, and includes:
Inclined products, such as: Hard frame inclined sleepers,
compact foam inclined sleepers, inclined play yard accessories, and
baby hammocks; and
Flat products, such as: Soft-sided products (baby pods and
baby nests, soft-sided travel bassinets or travel beds, hand-held
carriers marketed for sleep, and in-bed sleepers), rigid-sided and
rigid-framed compact bassinets, travel bassinets, and similar products
(baby boxes, compact, portable, or travel bassinets, or infant travel
beds), and baby tents.
None of these products is covered by an existing CPSC sleep standard.
CPSC considers that any items marketed for ``napping,'' ``snoozing,''
or ``dreaming,'' or any other word that implies sleeping, or that are
called a ``bed,'' as well as items marketed with a picture of a
sleeping infant, to be an infant sleep product.
Products that are subject to another CPSC sleep standard, or to
another durable infant or toddler product rule that is not marketed for
sleep, such as infant bouncers or swings, are not subject to the final
rule. Moreover, a crib
[[Page 33064]]
mattress, as defined in ASTM F2933-19, is not an infant sleep product
covered by the final rule.
2. Suppliers to This Market
Manufacturers of infant sleep products are categorized under many
different North American Classification System (NAICS) categories,
because there is not a NAICS code specifically for infant sleep
products. These items are made by companies that have baby furniture,
baby bedding items, mattresses, other durable baby items including
strollers or car seats, toys, or general merchandise as their primary
business. Businesses are generally considered small per the Small
Business Administration (SBA) size standards if they have fewer than
100 employees for importers or wholesalers, or fewer than 500 employees
for most of the relevant types of manufacturers for this rule. The SBA
size standard for mattress manufacturing is 1,000 employees. The
relevant NAICS codes include:
314999 (All Other Miscellaneous Textile Product Mills)
337910 (Mattress Manufacturing)
339930 (Doll, Toy, and Game Manufacturing)
339999 (All Other Miscellaneous Manufacturing)
423220 (Home Furnishing Merchant Wholesalers)
424330 (Women's, Children's, and Infants' Clothing and Accessories
Merchant Wholesalers)
The SBA size standards for ``small'' for the relevant NAICS codes
mean that most suppliers in this product category are considered
``small.'' A U.S. company that has a factory employing 100 people might
be a top 10 supplier in a particular infant sleep product category, but
would be considered ``small'' by SBA standards. Similarly, an importer
with a U.S. warehouse staff of 50 people would also be considered
``small.''
Prior to the recalls of some infant inclined sleep products, large
domestic and foreign companies and the larger ``small'' companies by
SBA size standards were responsible for most of the sales volume for
the hard frame inclined sleep products and inclined play yard sleeper
accessories. Many of the inclined sleep products were available at big
box chain retailers, and a few were available at mattress retailers.
The larger companies have recalled or discontinued these products, and
most big box stores have stopped stocking them. However, inclined sleep
products are still available from small manufacturers and importers,
and discontinued items made by large companies are still available from
online merchants. Small companies have always accounted for a majority
of the suppliers of the unregulated flat-bottomed sleep products and
infant hammock categories. A large number of suppliers exist for these
products; the market is fragmented with many sellers. Many of the
products covered by the final rule, particularly the soft-sided
products and the products sold by small businesses, are only available
online.
The majority of the suppliers to which this final rule would apply
are small by SBA standards. At least 60 small U.S.-based manufacturers
and importers are in this market, as well as 5 large domestic
companies, and dozens of foreign companies, some of which ship these
items directly to customers in the U.S. via online marketplaces. In
addition, more than a thousand home-based businesses supply flat sleep
products that would be subject to the final rule, of which hundreds
ship from the U.S. Some firms sell these items under multiple brand
names and models, including small manufacturers that make ``store
brands'' for larger companies. The number of importers selling flat
sleep products is approximate because the proliferation of online
retail makes it possible for importers to quickly change their product
offerings based on demand for particular products. The number of
foreign companies is approximate for the same reason. In addition to
the foreign companies that ship from U.S. distribution sites, dozens of
third-party sellers are on major internet retail sites that ship
products to U.S. consumers directly from a foreign country. The
analysis in this FRFA focuses on the impact on small U.S. manufacturers
and importers that ship from the U.S., as well as U.S.-based home
businesses, but the large and foreign companies will also be impacted
by the cost of complying with this rule. The large number of companies
in the flat sleep products market covered by this rule reflects both a
strong market demand for these products and a competitive market with
relatively low margins.
D. Testing and Certification
Under section 14 of the CPSA, once the new infant sleep product
mandatory standard become effective, all suppliers will be subject to
the third party testing and certification requirements under the CPSA
and the Testing and Labeling Pertaining to Product Certification rule
(16 CFR 1107), which requires that manufacturers and importers certify
that their products comply with the applicable children's product
safety standards, based on third party testing, and subject their
products to third party testing periodically. Third party testing costs
are in addition to the costs of modifying the infant sleeper products
to meet the standard.
For infant sleep products, the third-party testing costs are
expected to be about $1,500 per testing cycle per model, including both
the costs of the testing and the costs of the samples to be tested.
This is consistent with the IRFA in the SNPR, which estimated a cost of
$1,100 for testing alone, not including the cost of the samples to be
tested; we did not receive any comments on the SNPR providing a
different estimate. Based on comments received on the bassinet and
cradle final rule published in 2013, one-time costs of redesigning a
product to meet the standard could be as high as $500,000 for products
requiring major redesign. As allowed by the component part testing rule
(16 CFR 1109), importers may rely upon third party tests obtained by
their suppliers, which could reduce the impact on importers. In
addition, all businesses selling products covered by this rule were
already required to certify compliance to general children's product
rules for lead, phthalates, and small parts with third party testing,
so those third-party testing costs would not be considered new costs of
compliance for this rule.
E. Impact of Final Rule by Product Category
The impact on small businesses would vary by product category. We
describe each product, provide information on the types of firms that
supply the product, and describe the impacts for each product type for
complying with this rule or taking action to exit the market sector.
1. Inclined Sleep Products
(a) Hard Frame Inclined Sleepers, Compact Foam Inclined Sleepers, and
Play Yard Accessories
Since the NPR was published in 2017, some inclined sleep products
have been recalled or otherwise removed from the market. However, while
resale of recalled products is prohibited, discontinued items that were
not recalled are still available on the secondary market, as well as
additional physically similar products sold by small companies that
were not recalled. JPMA has two manufacturers that are certified as
compliant to the current ASTM F3118 standard for inclined sleepers.
While larger companies have removed most of their inclined products
from the market or remarketed them as chairs or loungers, some smaller
importers and foreign direct shippers still offer them as sleep
products. Some play yards with inclined sleep
[[Page 33065]]
accessories are still available. To date, the lack of a CPSC mandatory
standard means that new entrants are free to enter this market sector
with new inclined sleep products that do not comply with the existing
ASTM standard, ASTM F3118-17a, or any other ASTM or CPSC sleep
standard. Many of the recalled items were still available from smaller
internet merchants in the spring and summer of 2020. Some items that
were not recalled, but merely discontinued by the manufacturer, are
still available for sale from retailers, at least until the remaining
stock is sold.
Once the final rule is published and becomes effective, suppliers
of inclined sleep products must either redesign existing products to
comply with the standard and conduct third-party testing to demonstrate
compliance, stop selling the products, or remarket the products as not
intended for infant sleep. The impact of those options will depend upon
how much redesign the product requires, and what portion of the
company's sales are inclined sleep products. The impact on small
companies that sell many different products in different categories,
which is relatively common, especially for importers, will likely not
be as significant as the impact on small companies that sell only a few
types of products or that concentrate on sleep products covered by this
rule.
The impact of remarketing products for a different use, such as for
an older child, a pet, or not for sleep, will depend on the extent to
which consumers demand the product for the different use. Given the
proliferation of floor chairs, lounger chairs, rockers, and bouncer
seats on the market, it seems likely that consumers find value in
physically similar products that are marketed for a different use, and
that remarketing will not reduce demand. U.S. sales of the combined
category of bouncer seats, rockers, and sleepers totaled more than 2
million units and $126 million dollars in 2018.\44\
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\44\ Baby feeding, care, and travel accessory unit sales in the
United States in 2018, by product type--https://www.statista.com/statistics/891908/baby-feeding-care-and-travel-accessory-unit-sales-by-product-type-us/ And Baby feeding, care, and travel accessory
sales in the United States in 2018, by product type https://www.statista.com/statistics/891889/baby-feeding-care-and-travel-accessory-sales-by-product-type-us/.
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Suppliers of the hard-plastic framed rocker-type items may choose
to redesign their items to meet the requirements of a different
mandatory safety standard, particularly the one for infant bouncer
seats. Most of the hard-framed products were made by large or foreign
companies, although the market volume has shifted to smaller companies
as the larger companies have already removed these items from the
market or remarketed them as chairs, rockers, or chair/swing combos.
Two small domestic companies that make inclined sleep products may
experience a significant economic impact \45\ as these were some of
their best-selling products, and one of them also supplied the product
as a ``store brand'' to another company. The other sells multiple types
of sleepers within the scope of the final rule. Redesigning,
relabeling, or discontinuing the products could be a significant impact
on these firms. The rest of the small domestic companies that sold this
product and small importers will likely not be significantly impacted
because they sell many other products that would not be subject to the
final rule.
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\45\ Please note that the number of companies impacted for each
product type sums to more than the total number of impacted
companies for the rule as a whole, because several small companies
sell products in multiple product categories impacted by this rule.
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Suppliers of inclined compact foam products will need to redesign
their products with an incline of 10 degrees or less and meet other
requirements of this standard, remove these products from the market,
or relabel them as not being intended for sleep by children under 5
months of age. Some of these products have restraining harnesses to
keep the infant from sliding down on the slanted product, which is not
compliant with any of the existing CPSC sleep standards. Some suppliers
have already remarketed the products as loungers or floor chairs
without changing the design. Several of the companies that sell these
products sell larger wedge pillow products for adults and older
children as ``body pillows'' or sleeping positioners, so the infant
sleep products are not their only product line. Redesign or remarketing
could have a significant impact for the three small domestic companies
and one importer that have such products, as well as other products in
the scope of this rule, as a large portion of their product line.
Suppliers of inclined play yard accessories will need to redesign
their products with an incline of 10 degrees or less and meet other
requirements of this standard, remove these products from the market,
or relabel them as not being intended for sleep by children under 5
months of age, if appropriate. Most play yard suppliers have already
discontinued or recalled the inclined accessory products and replaced
them with flat products instead. The ASTM standard for non-full-size-
cribs and play yards, F406-19, already specifies that bassinet,
changing table, or similar accessories must comply with the applicable
requirements of ASTM standards addressing those product types. Play
yard suppliers were already required to comply with the requirement
that bassinet accessories meet the bassinet standard. Because the main
product is the play yard, not the particular accessories, and suppliers
were already required to comply with the bassinet standard for
bassinet-type accessories, this rule should not have a significant
impact on any of the suppliers of play yards, unless they had
``napper'' or ``inclined sleeper'' accessories that did not meet the
bassinet standard. The impact could be significant for one small
domestic company that still sells inclined play yard accessories, and
has other products in the scope of this rule.
(b) Baby Hammocks
Suppliers of baby hammocks are unlikely to be able to redesign
their product to meet any of the existing CPSC infant sleep standards.
An inclined sleep angle is inherent in the design of hammocks, which
shift shape as the infant moves. Sleeping pads in the bottom of a
hammock would still leave the product with sides that shift shape in
use. For hammock accessory products sold separately that attach to the
corners of a crib or play yard, there is no standard installation that
could be tested to meet incline, gap, side heights, or stability
requirements: The incline would depend on the size of the crib or play
yard and the weight of the infant, and the gaps between the hammock
side and the side of the crib or play yard would depend on the size of
the crib or play yard. Therefore, relabeling and remarketing baby
hammocks as being not for sleep or as being intended only for children
at over 5 months of age may be the only compliance option, other than
removing the products from the market altogether.
Since the NPR was published, some baby hammocks have been withdrawn
from the market by small companies that make and import other types of
baby products or adult hammocks. However, many home-based suppliers
remain in the market, as well as several small domestic businesses, one
of which appears to have infant crib hammocks as its only product.
Multiple importers based in the U.S. also sell hammocks with frames
made by foreign companies, but those companies will not be
significantly impacted because they sell many other products that would
not be impacted by the final rule. Several foreign companies that make
baby hammocks will have to stop distributing
[[Page 33066]]
them in the U.S., or conspicuously label them as being for use only by
children over 5 months of age.
If baby hammocks are removed from the market, the impact will
likely be significant for one small domestic company for which baby
hammocks constitute most, if not all, of their product line, as well as
possibly significant for several small importers that do not appear to
have many other products. The impact will likely be significant for
dozens of home-based manufacturers that have crib hammocks or other
fabric hammocks without a frame as their main or only product, if they
choose to exit the market. However, it is possible that some sellers of
hammocks will simply relabel and remarket them for older children or as
toy storage hammocks. The demand for these products for older children
or toy storage uses is unknown.
2. Flat Sleep Products
(a) Flat, Soft-Sided Products
Many of the suppliers of flat, soft-sided products would likely be
significantly impacted by the final rule. This is because compliance
with any of the sleep product standards, particularly the stability,
side height, and occupant containment requirements, would be difficult
for a product with low, soft sides. A product with low, soft sides
cannot meet the bassinet standard by simply adding a stand, nor can it
meet the hand-held carrier standard by simply adding handles. Also,
adding rigid higher sides may be contrary to the intended product use
as in-bed sleepers. Relabeling the products as being not intended for
infant sleep might not be an option if the product is clearly intended
for infant sleep, and is not large enough for an older child, although
these items could be remarketed as pet beds. At least nine small
importers and four domestic manufacturers that supply these products
have these products as most or all of their product line. There are
also potentially hundreds of small, home-based businesses for which
such low, soft-sided products appear to be their major product line.
The impact for suppliers that have these products as most of their
product line would likely be significant. In addition, the many home-
based businesses do not currently have warning labels, instruction
manuals, or certification to other CPSC or ASTM standards. Some
products are already being remarketed as loungers, nappers, or ``for
tummy time'', but will be required to comply with the final rule if
they are marketed for sleep, including napping.
Flat play yard accessories are already required to meet the
bassinet or other applicable standard. The ASTM standard for non-full-
size-cribs and play yards, F406-19, already specifies that bassinet,
changing table, or similar accessories must comply with the applicable
requirements of ASTM standards addressing those accessories. Most flat
play yard accessories are hard-framed, not soft-sided, and are
discussed in the next section. Because the main product is the play
yard, not the particular accessories, and suppliers were already
required to comply with the bassinet standard for bassinet-type
accessories, this rule should not have a significant impact on any of
the suppliers of flat play yard accessories, unless they have
``napper'' accessories that are not compliant with the bassinet
standard. One importer has only one model of play yard with a flat mesh
accessory as their main product; that importer could be significantly
impacted if their product is not compliant and they cannot find another
supplier with a compliant product.
(b) Flat, Rigid-Sided and Rigid-Framed Compact Bassinets, Travel
Bassinets, and Similar Products
Compact bassinets with rigid sides or rigid-framed sides but
without a stand or legs cannot meet the stability or physical
requirements of CPSC's bassinet and cradle standard or this standard,
independent of whether the product has an incline. Suppliers may choose
to offer their products with a stand to meet this standard, or add a
handle and redesign the product to meet the hand-held carrier standard.
In either case, the cost of redesigning the product could be
significant. These products usually already have flat sleep surface and
rigid sides, as required by the bassinet/cradle standard, but may not
meet the side-height requirement of the bassinet/cradle standard.
However, the cost to redesign could still be significant, as even a
simple re-design could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars per model
and require new third-party testing, and all of the product marketing,
instructions, and packaging would have to be revised. Adding a stand
would also increase the retail price of the product, which would likely
reduce sales, assuming that demand is responsive to price and that
other products like hand-held carriers are considered by consumers to
be reasonable substitutes. Moreover, these products likely cannot be
remarketed for another use by infants 5 months and younger, as the
physical design suggests the product is for sleep, although they could
be remarketed for older children or for pets, depending on whether the
size is appropriate for those uses. For the importers, the impact is
likely not significant, as they do not have these products as most of
their product line and can therefore either stop selling the product or
obtain a compliant product from a different supplier at minimal cost to
them. For the two domestic manufacturers of these products that have
these products as most of their product line, or sell multiple products
covered by this rule, the cost of compliance could be significant.
Baby boxes have similar compliance impacts to the larger category
of compact bassinets. Some compact bassinets are marketed as suitable
for bed-sharing, so may be considered as rigid in-bed sleepers.
Suppliers of baby boxes and in-bed sleepers with rigid or rigid-framed
sides may also choose to offer their products with a stand to meet the
bassinet standard. Given that these products already have rigid sides
and flat sleeping surfaces, the redesign may be relatively minor, but
could still cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to implement and
test, especially given the need to adapt them to meet stability
requirements. These suppliers could also choose to add a handle to
these products and make other design, instructions and labeling changes
in order to comply with the hand-held carrier standard. Labeling these
products as not for infant sleep is likely not an option, as these
items are intended for sleep, and are too small to be used by older
children. Remarketing as storage boxes is possible, but likely a much
lower price point. The impact could be significant for two suppliers of
baby boxes.
Flat sleep surface play yard accessories are already required to
meet the bassinet or other applicable standard. The ASTM standard for
non-full-size-cribs and play yards, F406-19, already specifies that
bassinet, changing table, or similar accessories must comply with the
applicable requirements of ASTM standards addressing those accessories.
Because the main product is the play yard, not the particular
accessories, and suppliers were already required to comply with the
bassinet standard for bassinet-type accessories, this rule should not
have a significant impact on any of the suppliers of flat rigid-sided
play yard accessories, with the possible exception of a few ``napper''
products from small importers. Those importers should be able to find a
new compliant supplier relatively easily, or relabel the items as not
for sleep.
[[Page 33067]]
(c) Baby Tents
Baby tents cannot meet any of CPSC's sleep standards, due to the
physical form of these products, which includes slanted flexible sides
connected to the floor, sometimes with hanging cords and anchoring
spikes. Therefore, relabeling these products as not for infant sleep or
removing the products from the market are the only compliance options.
We assume that most suppliers will choose to remarket their items as
not for sleep or for older children, and that this will not reduce
sales, because the advertised primary purpose of the product is shade
and insect screen. Also, most suppliers in this product sector are
importers with many other unrelated products or foreign direct
shippers. CPSC believes it unlikely most of the suppliers in this
category will experience a significant economic impact as a result of
this rule. One small importer does not appear to have any other
products that might be significantly impacted if they cannot find a
compliant supplier.
F. Summary of Costs and the Economic Impact of the Final Rule
Suppliers that choose to stay in the market for infant sleep
products will need to comply with the final rule, or another CPSC sleep
standard, and certify compliance through third party testing. Suppliers
that choose to relabel their products as bouncer seats or swings will
need to meet the standards for those products. Suppliers that relabel
their products for use by children over 5 months will still need to
meet general testing and certification requirements required for all
children's products, such as testing for lead content and phthalates,
as well as small parts, but they were already required to meet those
requirements.
Based on costs for compliance with other ASTM and CPSC standards
for durable nursery products, the expected cost to comply with third
party testing will be about $1,500 per model tested, including the
costs of the samples to be tested. This is for compliance with the
specific standard for infant sleep products only; the costs for
complying with general requirements for children's products should not
be new costs for any suppliers. Some of the companies that are small by
SBA standards have up to a dozen models of different products impacted
by this rule, each of which will have to be tested for compliance with
this standard. This would suggest testing costs of about $18,000 per
testing cycle.
The suppliers of low, soft-sided products and hammocks are unlikely
to be able to redesign their products to meet any of the sleep
standards, so they will need to decide whether to exit the market or
relabel their products for use by older children. The impact is likely
to be significant for suppliers of these products if these products
constitute a substantial portion of their product line, and they choose
to exit the market rather than remarketing the items for older children
or pets.
Some manufacturers and importers, both large and small, may be able
to minimize the impact of this rule by marketing their products as not
for infant sleep, thus effectively putting their products out of scope
of this rule. This may involve conspicuously labeling and marketing
their items as not for sleep by children under 5 months. Some flat
sleep surface rigid-sided products could demonstrate compliance with
this standard and the bassinet standard with the addition of a stand or
other rigid support. Some non-compliant items might be remarketed for
pet use, which has apparently happened with some former children's
products, but the market for such products is probably limited.
Remarketing these products could still result in significant impact of
suppliers if such relabeling results in a substantial reduction in
product demand.
While some items can be credibly remarketed as not for infant
sleep, such as items that resemble chairs or swings, the design of
other items suggest they are intended for infant sleep, including
hammock crib accessories, baby boxes, and in-bed sleepers, as are most
compact bassinets and anything marketed as a ``bed''. Some of these
products could be marketed for children over 5 months, depending on the
size of the product, but many are too small for a larger child.
Suppliers of products where the design and function of the product
communicates to the consumer that the product is intended for infant
sleep may experience a significant economic impact if those products
are a substantial portion of their product line.
Most home-based manufacturers will have the choice of either
remarketing their products as not for infant sleep or stopping the sale
of the products. The cost of redesigning the product to comply with the
standard could be a significant portion of revenue for home-based
manufacturers, and redesign might not even be possible for some
products commonly sold by home-based manufacturers, such as baby
hammocks and low, soft-sided flat products. Additionally, even if
redesign were possible, the testing costs alone could be sufficient to
induce these home-based manufacturers to withdraw from the market for
these products. The economic impact of the rule on these home-based
manufacturers is likely to be significant. In some cases, these
manufacturers might be able to relabel their products for older
children, or for pet use. In the case of hammocks, the items could also
be marketed for toy storage. However, the demand for infant sleep
products for these types of alternative uses is likely to be limited.
We discussed earlier the impacts for specific types of sleeper
markets. In summary, the suppliers of inclined sleepers can redesign
their items to meet this standard, remove them from the market, relabel
them for use by older children, or remarket them as some type of chair.
Some inclined items have already been remarketed as types of chairs or
chair/swing combination products. The impact would depend on the demand
for these products as chairs; the current remarketing suggests that
companies have found there is indeed demand for these products as
chairs. Suppliers of inclined play yard accessories have similar
options; it appears that most play yard suppliers have chosen to remove
these items from the market and replace them with flat sleep surface
accessories instead. Because play yards were already required to comply
with the bassinet standard if in bassinet mode, this may not be a
significant impact. Suppliers of compact rigid-sided and rigid-framed
products without a stand may be able to redesign their products to meet
this standard, or remarket them for use by older children. The size of
some of these products would be appropriate for use by older children.
Some suppliers of soft-sided ``travel'' and ``compact'' bassinets are
unlikely to be able to redesign their products to comply with this
standard, but may be able to remarket them for use by older children.
Similarly, suppliers of in-bed sleepers and baby hammocks are unlikely
to be able to redesign their products to comply with this rule, but
some may be able to remarket them for use by older children or pets,
depending on the size of the products, although demand for those uses
may be limited.
In general, suppliers of products with limited remarketing options,
where the size of the product is not conducive to use by older
children, the low, soft sides cannot easily be redesigned to meet this
standard, and the physical configuration of the product limits uses
other than sleep, are likely to be significantly impacted. Some
suppliers may be able to remarket their infant sleep products for
alternative uses. However, this market is probably limited; otherwise,
some of these suppliers would already
[[Page 33068]]
have been producing products for these alternative uses. At least nine
small domestic companies and twelve small importers are likely to be
significantly impacted because products in scope of this rule represent
most or a substantial portion of their product line. Hundreds of home-
based manufacturers based in the U.S. supply baby nests, baby pods, in-
bed sleepers, hammocks, and crib hammocks are likely to be
significantly impacted, although some may be able to relabel their
items as not for sleep or for older children. If the products cannot be
remarketed, many of these home-based manufacturers may eliminate infant
sleep products from their product lines; it also possible that a
significant proportion may go out of business.
In summary, taking all of these factors into account, the final
rule is likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
G. Other Potential Impacts of the Final Rule
The final rule would make it illegal to sell, offer for sale,
manufacture for sale, distribute in commerce, or import into the United
States products not compliant with the rule 12 months after the
publication of the rule in the Federal Register. This means that
parents and other caregivers would not be able to purchase these items.
The large volume of these products sold or home-made reflect that these
products all address a demand for a compact sleep space for babies, so
it is reasonable to assume that demand will continue for new or
redesigned products that meet one of CPSC's sleep standards. As
discussed earlier, products that are compliant with the current CPSC
sleep standards are already widely available, provide compact sleep
spaces, and are in the same general price range as the items covered by
this rule.
Several public commenters suggested that this rule would cause
caregivers to resort to less safe sleep solutions, such as putting
infants to sleep in car seats, or using pillows to position infants on
adult beds. Caregivers may already make home-made sleep places or mis-
use other types of products, and CPSC is unaware of data to support the
assertion that this rule would further encourage such practices.
Directions for making home-made baby nests were widely available on the
internet before CPSC published the 2017 NPR. The DNPES, which was done
in 2014, found that a majority of parents were using products for sleep
that are not marketed for sleep, such as swings, bouncer seats, and
hand-held carriers at least once a week.\46\ In addition, many inclined
products have already been removed from the market or relabeled as not
for sleep since publication of the 2017 NPR. While some of the inclined
products may be remarketed as not for infant sleep, the final rule will
provide parents and other caregivers clearer information as to the
manufacturer's intended safe use.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ The DNPES reported that in households with children under
6, children slept in bouncer seats at least once a week in 70% of
households that owned a bouncer seat, slept in swings at least once
a week in 91% of households with a swing, and slept in hand-held
carriers at least once a week in 87% of households with hand-held
carriers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The effective date is a ``sold by'' date. This means that retailers
will need to sell or otherwise dispose of their stock by that date.
Given that this rule has been in progress for several years through a
notice and comment rulemaking, and that many of the inclined products
have already been withdrawn from the market, this should not have a
significant impact on small retailers.
This rule would require all infant sleep products not in the scope
of other CPSC sleep standards to comply with this rule. This means that
new products would have to comply with this rule, or one of the other
sleep standards. Suppliers may introduce new products that comply with
any of those standards, such as an innovative bassinet design that
meets all the requirements of the bassinet standard. They may also work
with ASTM to revise one of the ASTM sleep standards to cover their new
product, and then CPSC could consider such revision as part of CPSC's
procedures for accepting revisions to voluntary standards that are the
basis for CPSC mandatory standards. Suppliers of innovative products
may also work with ASTM to develop a separate, new sleep standard, then
seek to have CPSC codify the new ASTM standard as a mandatory infant
sleep standard under section 104 of the CPSIA.
H. Efforts to Minimize the Impact on Small Entities (Alternatives)
CPSC has attempted to minimize the impact of the final rule on
small entities by defining the scope of this rule to only include
infant sleep products that are:
Not within the scope of another standard;
marketed or intended for infant sleep, including napping;
and
marketed or intended for use by children up to 5 months
old.
These requirements provide small businesses the opportunity to
remove their products from the scope of this standard by marketing them
as not intended for sleep, or only intended for use by older children,
or for pets. Companies can also redesign their products to meet the
requirements of another standard, such as infant bouncer seats or hand-
held carriers. In some cases where there is another use for the
product, the only change required to make a product subject to one of
these other standards is to relabel or remarket the product, removing
any references to its use for sleeping.
CPSC also published an SNPR in 2019, which means firms have been
aware of this rulemaking effort and have had several years to prepare
for implementation of the final rule. Many companies that had inclined
products that were in the scope of the 2017 NPR have removed those
products from the market since 2019, or remarketed them as loungers,
bouncer seats, or other products not for sleep.
While the Commission has exempted small batch manufacturers from
the testing requirements proposed under other rules, under Section
14(d)(4)(C)(ii) of the CPSA, the Commission cannot ``provide any
alternative requirements or exemption'' from third party testing for
``durable infant or toddler products,'' as defined in section 104(f) of
the CPSIA. Consequently, staff cannot recommend a small batch exemption
for small baby nest and hammock home-based manufacturers absent a
statutory change.
The ASTM F3118 committee considered wording that would allow
manufacturers to choose whether to comply with F3118 or another ASTM
sleep standard, to allow innovative products to enter the market more
easily. This final rule requires suppliers to comply with this rule or
one of CPSC mandatory standards for full-size cribs, non-full-size
cribs, bassinets and cradles, play yards, or bedside sleepers. The
approach considered by ASTM to allow suppliers to choose other ASTM
sleep product standards would allow suppliers to sell products that did
not meet an existing CPSC sleep standard, such as a drop side crib, so
long as that product had a sleep surface incline of less than 10
degrees and otherwise complied with ASTM F3118. Staff did not recommend
this approach, which would effectively allow potentially unsafe, non-
compliant sleep products to re-enter the market.
Finally, the IRFA discussed allowing a later effective date. A
later effective date would reduce the economic impact on firms in two
ways. Firms would be less likely to experience a lapse in production/
importation, which could result if they are unable to comply and
[[Page 33069]]
third-party test within the required timeframe. Also, firms could
spread costs over a longer time period, thereby reducing their annual
costs, as well as the present value of their total costs. CPSC received
comments both supporting and opposing a later effective date. Given
that many of the products have already been removed from the market or
otherwise remarketed to be out of scope of this rule, reducing the
impact on domestic small businesses, and that companies already had
notice that this final rule was in progress since November 2019, the
Commission will maintain a 12-month effective date, as proposed in the
2019 SNPR.
XIV. Environmental Considerations
The Commission's regulations address whether the agency is required
to prepare an environmental assessment or an environmental impact
statement. Under these regulations, certain categories of CPSC actions
normally have ``little or no potential for affecting the human
environment,'' and therefore, they do not require an environmental
assessment or an environmental impact statement. Safety standards
providing requirements for products come under this categorical
exclusion. 16 CFR 1021.5(c)(1). The final rule for infant sleep
products falls within the categorical exemption.
XV. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule contains information collection requirements that
are subject to public comment and review by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA; 44
U.S.C. 3501-3521). Under 44 U.S.C. 3507(a)(1)(D), an agency must
publish the following information:
A title for the collection of information;
a summary of the collection of information;
a brief description of the need for the information and
the proposed use of the information;
a description of the likely respondents and proposed
frequency of response to the collection of information;
an estimate of the burden that shall result from the
collection of information; and
notice that comments may be submitted to the OMB.
The preamble to the 2019 SNPR (84 FR 60959-61) discussed the
information collection burden of the supplemental proposed rule and
specifically requested comments on the accuracy of our estimates. The
OMB assigned control number 3041-0177 for this information collection.
We did not receive any comment regarding the information collection
burden of the proposal in the 2019 SNPR. For the final rule, CPSC
adjusts the number of small home-based manufacturers from 6 to 1,200,
and the number of other suppliers from 13 to 125. In accordance with
PRA requirements, the Commission provides the following information:
Title: Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products.
Description: The final rule defines an ``infant sleep product'' as
a product marketed or intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for
an infant up to 5 months of age, and that is not already subject to one
of the mandatory CPSC sleep standards: Full-size cribs, non-full-size
cribs, play yards, bassinets, cradles, or bed-side sleepers. The infant
sleep products covered by this rule include inclined and flat sleep
products, such as inclined sleepers, play yard infant sleep
accessories, baby nests and pods, in-bed sleepers, baby hammocks,
compact or travel bassinets without a stand or legs, and baby tents.
This final rule for infant sleep products incorporates by reference the
voluntary standard for infant inclined sleep products issued by ASTM
International, ASTM F3118-17a, Standard Consumer Safety Specification
for Infant Inclined Sleep Products, with modifications to further
reduce the risk of injury associated with infant sleep products. The
final rule sets a safety floor for all infant sleep products sold in
the United States, by requiring infant sleep products to have a seat
back/sleep surface angle of 10 degrees or less from horizontal, and to
meet the requirements of 16 CFR part 1218, Safety Standard for
Bassinets and Cradles, including conforming to the definition of a
bassinet/cradle. Part 1218 incorporates by reference the performance
and labeling requirements of ASTM F2194-16[egr]1. Sections 8 and 9 of
ASTM F2194-16[egr]1 contain requirements for marking, labeling, and
instructional literature. These requirements fall within the definition
of ``collection of information,'' as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(3).
Description of Respondents: Persons who manufacture or import
infant sleep products.
Estimated Burden: We estimate the burden of this collection of
information as follows:
Table 6--Estimated Annual Reporting Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Frequency of Total annual Hours per Total burden
Burden type Type of supplier respondents responses responses response hours
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labeling.................................. Home-based manufacturers.... 1,200 1 1,200 7 8,400
Other Suppliers............. 125 2 250 1 250
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Labeling Total........................ ............................ .............. .............. .............. .............. 8,650
Instructional literature.................. Home-based manufacturers.... 1,200 1 1,200 50 60,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total burden.......................... ............................ .............. .............. .............. .............. 68,650
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two groups of quantifiable entities supply infant sleep products to
the U.S. market that will likely need to make some modifications to
their existing warning labels to meet the requirements for warnings.
The first group consists of very small home-based manufacturers, which
may not currently have warning labels on their infant sleep products.
Similar rulemakings (such as that for sling carriers) assumed that it
would take home-based manufacturers approximately 15 hours to develop a
new label. Given that some home-based manufacturers supply infant sleep
products with warning labels already, we have estimated approximately 7
hours per response for this group of suppliers. Therefore, the total
burden hours for very small home-based manufacturers is 7 hours per
model x 1,200 entities x 1 models per entity = 8,400 hours.
The second group of quantifiable entities supplying infant sleep
products to the U.S. market that will need to make some modifications
to their existing warning labels are non-home-based manufacturers and
importers. These firms do not operate at the low
[[Page 33070]]
production volume of the home-based firms. All of the firms in this
second group have existing warning labels on their products, but not
necessarily labels that are compliant with the requirements of ASTM
F2194, as specified in 16 CFR part 1218, and would therefore, have to
make label modifications. Given that these firms are used to working
with warning labels, we estimate that the time required to make any
modifications now or in the future would be about 1 hour per model.
Based on an evaluation of supplier product lines, each entity supplies
an average of 2 models of infant sleep products; therefore, the
estimated burden associated with labels for this second group is 1
hours per model x 125 entities x 2 models per entity = 250 hours.
The total burden hours attributable to warning labels is the sum of
the burden hours for both entity groups: Very small home-based
manufacturers (8,400 burden hours) + non-home-based manufacturers and
importers (250 burden hours) = 8,650 burden hours. We estimate the
hourly compensation for the time required to create and update labels
is $33.71 (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, ``Employer Costs for
Employee Compensation,'' December 2020, Supplementary table 1, total
compensation for all sales and office workers in goods-producing
private industries: https://www.bls.gov/web/ecec/ecsuptc.pdf.
Therefore, the estimated annual cost to industry associated with the
labeling requirements is $291,591.50 ($33.71 per hour x 8,650 hours =
$291,591.50). No operating, maintenance, or capital costs are
associated with the collection.
ASTM F2194 (section 9) requires instructions to be supplied with
the product. As already noted, the proposed Safety Standard for Infant
Sleep Products requires infant sleep products to meet these
requirements. Under the OMB's regulations (5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2)), the
time, effort, and financial resources necessary to comply with a
collection of information that would be incurred by persons in the
``normal course of their activities'' are excluded from a burden
estimate, where an agency demonstrates that the disclosure activities
required to comply are ``usual and customary.''
We are unaware of infant sleep products that generally require use
instructions but lack such instructions. However, it is possible that
the 1,200 home-based manufacturers of infant hammocks, baby nests, and
in-bed sleepers may not supply instruction manuals as part of their
``normal course of activities.'' Based on information collected for the
infant slings rulemaking, staff tentatively estimates that each small
entity supplying homemade infant hammocks, baby nests, or in-bed
sleepers might require 50 hours to develop an instruction manual to
accompany their products. These firms typically supply only one infant
sleep product model. Therefore, the costs of designing an instruction
manual for these firms could be as high as $2,022,600 (50 hours per
model x 1 model per entity x 1,200 entities = $2,022,600). However,
this cost estimate may overestimate the annual cost to industry because
many home-based firms might not pay average U.S. domestic wage rates.
Not all firms would incur these costs every year, but new firms that
enter the market would incur these costs, and this is a highly
fluctuating market. Other firms are estimated to have no burden hours
associated with instruction manuals because any burden associated with
supplying instructions with infant sleep products would be ``usual and
customary'' and not within the definition of ``burden'' under the OMB's
regulations.
Based on this analysis, CPSC staff estimates that the final rule
for infant sleep products would impose a burden to industry of 68,650
hours at a cost of $2,314,191.50 annually. In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)), we have submitted
the information collection requirements of this final rule to the OMB.
XVI. Preemption
Section 26(a) of the CPSA, 15 U.S.C. 2075(a), provides that when a
consumer product safety standard is in effect and applies to a product,
no state or political subdivision of a state may either establish or
continue in effect a standard or regulation that prescribes
requirements for the performance, composition, contents, design,
finish, construction, packaging, or labeling of such product dealing
with the same risk of injury unless the state requirement is identical
to the federal standard. Section 26(c) of the CPSA also provides that
states or political subdivisions of states may apply to the Commission
for an exemption from this preemption under certain circumstances.
Section 104(b) of the CPSIA deems rules issued under that provision
``consumer product safety standards.'' Therefore, once this final rule
for infant sleep products issued under section 104 of the CPSIA takes
effect, the rule will preempt in accordance with section 26(a) of the
CPSA.
XVII. Congressional Review Act
The Congressional Review Act (CRA; 5 U.S.C. 801-808) states that,
before a rule may take effect, the agency issuing the rule must submit
the rule, and certain related information, to each House of Congress
and the Comptroller General. 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1). The submission must
indicate whether the rule is a ``major rule.'' The CRA states that the
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (``OIRA'') determines
whether a rule qualifies as a ``major rule.'' Pursuant to the CRA, OIRA
designated this rule as not a ``major rule,'' as defined in 5 U.S.C.
Sec. 804(2). A ``major rule'' is one that the Administrator of OIRA
finds has resulted in, or is likely to result in: (A) An annual effect
on the economy of $100,000,000 or more; (B) a major increase in costs
or prices for consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or
local government agencies, or geographic regions; or (C) a significant
adverse effects on competition, employment, investment, productivity,
innovation, or on the ability of United States-based enterprises to
compete with foreign-based enterprises in domestic and export markets.
5 U.S.C. 804(2). To comply with the CRA, CPSC will submit the required
information to each House of Congress and the Comptroller General.
List of Subjects
16 CFR Part 1112
Administrative practice and procedure, Audit, Consumer protection,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Third party conformity
assessment body.
16 CFR Part 1130
Administrative practice and procedure, Business and industry,
Consumer protection, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
16 CFR Part 1236
Consumer protection, Imports, Incorporation by reference, Infants
and children, Labeling, Law enforcement, and Toys.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Commission amends
Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 1112--REQUIREMENTS PERTAINING TO THIRD PARTY CONFORMITY
ASSESSMENT BODIES
0
1. The authority citation for part 1112 continues to read as follows:
[[Page 33071]]
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063; Pub. L. 110-314, section 3, 122 Stat.
3016, 3017 (2008).
0
2. Amend Sec. 1112.15 by adding paragraph (b)(46) to read as follows:
Sec. 1112.15 When can a third party conformity assessment body apply
for CPSC acceptance for a particular CPSC rule and/or test method?
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(46) 16 CFR part 1236, Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products.
* * * * *
0
3. The authority citation for part 1130 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2056a, 2056(b).
0
4. Amend Sec. 1130.2 by revising paragraph (a)(12) to read as follows:
PART 1130--REQUIREMENTS FOR CONSUMER REGISTRATION OF DURABLE INFANT
OR TODDLER PRODUCTS
Sec. 1130.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(12) Bassinets and cradles, including bedside sleepers and infant
sleep products;
* * * * *
0
5. Add part 1236 to read as follows:
PART 1236--SAFETY STANDARD FOR INFANT SLEEP PRODUCTS
Sec.
1236.1 Scope.
1236.2 Requirements for infant sleep products.
Authority: Sec. 104, Pub. L. 110-314, 122 Stat. 3016 (15 U.S.C.
2056a); Sec. 3, Pub. L. 112-28, 125 Stat. 273.
Sec. 1236.1 Scope.
This part establishes a consumer product safety standard for infant
sleep products, including inclined and flat sleep surfaces, that
applies to all products marketed or intended to provide a sleeping
accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of age, and that are not
already subject to any of the following standards:
(a) 16 CFR part 1218 Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles;
(b) 16 CFR part 1219 Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(c) 16 CFR part 1220 Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(d) 16 CFR part 1221 Safety Standard for Play Yards;
(e) 16 CFR part 1222 Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
Sec. 1236.2 Requirements for infant sleep products.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, each
infant sleep product must comply with ASTM F3118-17a, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Infant Inclined Sleep Products (approved on
September 1, 2017). The Director of the Federal Register approves this
incorporation by reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR
part 51. You may obtain a copy from ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor
Drive, P.O. Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959; phone: (610)
832-9585; www.astm.org. A read-only copy of the standard is available
for viewing on the ASTM website at https://www.astm.org/READINGLIBRARY/
. You may inspect a copy at the Division of the Secretariat, U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room 820, 4330 East-West Highway,
Bethesda, MD 20814, telephone (301) 504-7479, email: [email protected],
or at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this material at NARA, email
[email protected], or go to: www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/ibr-locations.html.
(b) Comply with ASTM F3118-17a with the following additions or
exclusions:
(1) Instead of complying with Introduction of ASTM F3118-17a,
comply with the following:
(i) Introduction. This consumer safety specification addresses
incidents associated with infant sleep products identified by the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC).
(A) In response to incident data compiled by CPSC, this consumer
safety specification attempts to minimize the following:
(1) Fall hazards,
(2) Asphyxiation and suffocation, and
(3) Obstruction of nose and mouth by bedding.
(B) The purpose of the standard is to address infant sleep products
not already covered by traditional sleep product standards and to
reduce deaths associated with known infant sleep hazards, including,
but not limited to, a seat back or sleep surface angle that is greater
than 10 degrees from the horizontal.
(C) This consumer safety specification is written within the
current state-of-the-art of infant sleep product technology and will be
updated whenever substantive information becomes available that
necessitates additional requirements or justifies the revision of
existing requirements.
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) In section 1.1 of ASTM F3118-17a, replace the term ``infant
inclined sleep products'' with ``infant sleep products.''
(3) In section 1.2 of ASTM F3118-17a, replace the term ``infant
inclined sleep products'' with ``infant sleep products.''
(4) Instead of complying with section 1.3 of ASTM F3118-17a, comply
with the following:
(i) 1.3 This consumer safety performance specification covers
infant sleep products, including inclined and flat sleep surfaces,
marketed or intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant
up to 5 months old, and that are not already subject to any of the
following standards:
(A) 16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles,
incorporating by reference ASTM F2194, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bassinets and Cradles;
(B) 16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs,
incorporating by reference ASTM F1169, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(C) 16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs,
incorporating by reference applicable requirements in ASTM F406,
Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs/
Play Yards;
(D) 16 CFR part 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards, incorporating
by reference applicable requirements in ASTM F406, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs/Play Yards;
(E) 16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers,
incorporating by reference ASTM F2906, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Bedside Sleepers.
(ii) 1.3.1 If the infant sleep product can be converted into a
product for which a CPSC regulation exists, the product shall meet the
applicable requirements of the CPSC regulation, when in that use mode.
If the infant sleep product can be converted into a product for which
no CPSC regulation exists, but another ASTM consumer safety
specification exists, the product shall meet the applicable
requirements of the ASTM consumer safety specification, when in that
use mode.
(iii) 1.3.2 Crib mattresses that meet the requirements of ASTM
F2933 are not covered by the specifications of this standard.
(5) In section 1.4 of ASTM F3118-17a, replace the term ``infant
inclined sleep product'' with ``infant sleep product.''
(6) Instead of complying with section 2.1 of ASTM F3118-17a, comply
with the following:
(i) F406 Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Non-Full-Size
Baby Cribs/Play Yards;
(ii) F1169 Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Full-Size
Baby Cribs;
[[Page 33072]]
(iii) F2194 Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Bassinets
and Cradles;
(iv) F2906 Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Bedside
Sleepers;
(v) F2933 Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Crib
Mattresses.
(7) Instead of complying with section 2.2 of ASTM F3118-17a, comply
with the following:
(i) 16 CFR 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles;
(ii) 16 CFR 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(iii) 16 CFR 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(iv) 16 CFR 1221--Safety Standard for Play Yards;
(v) 16 CFR 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
(8) Do not comply with sections 2.3 and 2.4 of ASTM F3118-17a,
including Figures 1 and 2.
(9) Do not comply with sections 3.1.1 through 3.1.6 of ASTM F3118-
17a.
(10) Instead of complying with section 3.1.7 of ASTM F3118-17a,
comply with the following:
(i) 3.1.7 infant sleep product, n--a product marketed or intended
to provide a sleeping accommodation for an infant up to 5 months of
age, and that is not subject to any of the following:
(A) 16 CFR part 1218--Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles;
(B) 16 CFR part 1219--Safety Standard for Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(C) 16 CFR part 1220--Safety Standard for Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs;
(D) 16 CFR part 1221- Safety Standard for Play Yards;
(E) 16 CFR part 1222--Safety Standard for Bedside Sleepers.
(ii) [Reserved]
(11) Do not comply with sections 3.1.7.1 through 3.1.13 of ASTM
F3118-17a.
(12) Do not comply with section 3.1.15 through 3.1.16 of ASTM
F3118-17a.
(13) Do not comply with section 5 of ASTM F3118-17a.
(14) Do not comply with sections 6.1 through 6.8 of ASTM F3118-17a.
(15) Instead of complying with section 6.9 of ASTM F3118-17a,
comply with the following:
(i) 6.9 Maximum Seat Back/Sleep Surface Angle:
(ii) 6.9.1 Infant Sleep Product--The angle of the seat back/sleep
surface intended for sleep along the occupant's head to toe axis
relative to the horizontal shall not exceed 10 degrees when tested in
accordance with 7.11.2.
(iii) Do not comply with 6.9.2.
(iv) 6.9.3 Infant Sleep Products--shall meet, 16 CFR part 1218,
Safety Standard for Bassinets and Cradles, including conforming to the
definition of a ``bassinet/cradle.''
(16) Do not comply with sections 6.10 through 7.10 of ASTM F3118-
17a.
(17) Do not comply with section 7.11.1.3 of ASTM F3118-17a.
(18) In section 7.11.2 of ASTM F3118-17a, replace ``Infant Inclined
Sleep Product and Infant Inclined Sleep Product Accessory'' with
``Infant Sleep Products.''
(19) Instead of complying with section 7.11.2.1 and 7.11.2.2 of
ASTM F3118-17a, comply with the following:
(i) 7.11.2.1 If applicable, place the product in the manufacturer's
recommended highest seat back/sleep surface angle position intended for
sleep.
(ii) 7.11.2.2 Place the hinged weight gage-infant in the product
and position the gage with the hinge centered over the seat bight line
and the upper plate of the gage on the seat back/sleep surface. Place a
digital protractor on the upper torso/head area lengthwise.
(20) Do not comply with sections 7.11.3 through 9, or the Appendix,
of ASTM F3118-17a.
(21) Add section 10.2 to ASTM F3118-17a:
(i) 10.2 infant sleep product
(ii) [Reserved]
Alberta E. Mills,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2021-12723 Filed 6-22-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P