Author:
Horner Susan,Benbrook Keri,Hoffman Melissa,Libutti Lauren
Abstract
Background:
Relationships between parents and infants are essential for mitigating stressors encountered in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and are supported by parent presence and engagement.
Purpose:
The purpose of this study was to compare NICU parent and infant outcomes pre- and postimplementation of an intervention aimed at increasing parent presence and engagement in the NICU. This family-centered care intervention consisted of communicating specific guidelines for parent presence.
Methods:
Data related to parent presence, skin-to-skin care, and breastfeeding; parental stress; infant outcomes including weight gain, length of stay, feeding status at discharge, and stress; and unit-level outcomes were collected from a convenience sample of 40 NICU families recruited preimplementation and compared with data for 38 NICU families recruited postimplementation of specific guidelines for parent presence. To establish comparability of groups, infants were assigned scores using the Neonatal Medical Index.
Results:
Parent presence, engagement in skin-to-skin care, and breastfeeding rates were not significantly different between groups. Stress-related outcomes were significantly decreased in NICU mothers, fathers, and infants, and infant feeding outcomes were improved in the postintervention group.
Conclusions:
Specific guidelines for parent presence may represent an invitation for parents to engage with their NICU infants and may positively impact parent and infant stress.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Maternity and Midwifery,Critical Care Nursing,Pediatrics
Cited by
3 articles.
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