BBC investigation exposes lethal baby-sleep advice from unqualified 'experts'

Safeguarding Early Years Family Support & Early Help
Published May 5, 2026
An undercover BBC investigation has uncovered deeply worrying practices whereby unqualified individuals posing as baby sleep consultants are providing dangerous advice to new parents, guidance that medical professionals warn could result in serious injury or infant death. The secret filming captures self-described experts recommending practices that directly contradict established safe sleep standards, highlighting critical vulnerabilities in how parenting support is regulated and disseminated. The findings raise urgent questions for local safeguarding partnerships and early years services about the monitoring of family support provision. With social media and private consultation services increasingly filling gaps left by statutory health visiting services, vulnerable parents may be exposed to lethal misinformation presented as professional expertise. This exposes the vital importance of ensuring all family support channels—whether statutory, voluntary or private—adhere to evidence-based safe sleep guidance. For Lead Members with responsibility for children's services, this investigation underscores the need to review how baby sleep safety messaging reaches families in their areas. It highlights the intersection between early help provision and safeguarding, demonstrating why robust quality assurance of parenting support services, alongside clear public health communications, remains essential to protecting the most vulnerable infants from preventable harm.

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