Subsequently, by virtue
of defining that an adult and infant are unable to safely sleep on the same surface together, such as what occurs during bedsharing, even when all known adverse bedsharing risk factors are absent and safe bedsharing
practices involving breastfeeding mothers are followed, an infant that dies while sharing a sleeping surface with his / her mother is labeled a SUID, and not SIDS.26 In this way the infant death statistics increasingly supplement the idea that bedsharing is inherently and always hazardous and
lend credence, artificially, to the belief that under no circumstance can a mother, breastfeeding or not, safely care for, or protect her infant if asleep together in a bed.27 The legitimacy
of such a sweeping inference is highly problematic, we argue, in light
of the fact that when careful and complete examination
of death scenes, the results revealed that 99 %
of bedsharing deaths could be explained by the presence
of at least one and usually multiple independent risk factors for SIDS such as maternal smoking, prone infant sleep, use
of alcohol and / or drugs by the bedsharing adults.28 Moreover, this new ideology is especially troubling because it leads to condemnations
of bedsharing parents that border on charges
of being neglectful and / or
abusive.
By raising the number
of seller financing transactions from 3 to 5 that an individual can participate in without having to register as a mortgage loan originator, H.R. 5287 would increase housing opportunities to moderate and low - income families, as well as first time homebuyers, without removing any safeguards that protect consumers against
abusive lending practices.