新生儿重症监护室中因缺氧缺血性脑病接受降温治疗的婴儿父母的心理健康。

IF 2.1 4区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology Pub Date : 2024-11-06 DOI:10.1080/02646838.2024.2423178
Jenny Ingram, David Odd, Lucy Beasant, Ela Chakkarapani
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:新生儿重症监护室(NICU)通常会在重症监护期间让父母拥抱婴儿,以促进亲子关系。然而,由于担心影响降温过程或重症监护,正在接受降温治疗和重症监护的婴儿并没有得到常规的亲子拥抱。我们开发了 CoolCuddle 干预措施,让父母能够在降温治疗期间安全地拥抱婴儿。我们调查了 CoolCuddle 是否会影响亲子关系和父母的心理健康:我们对父母进行了访谈,并比较了两组父母的心理健康和亲子关系测量结果;一组父母可以使用 CoolCuddle,另一组父母不能使用 CoolCuddle:从2019年到2023年,英格兰和威尔士的10个三级新生儿监护病房和107个家庭参与其中。所有父母的产后抑郁程度都很高。然而,与未使用 CoolCuddle 的家庭相比,CoolCuddle 组的母亲在出院时抑郁程度明显降低,EPDS 分数明显降低,MIBS 分数明显提高(与母婴关系更好相一致)。8 周后再次进行测量时,所有测量结果均相似。家长们表示,在新生儿重症监护室期间,他们还没有准备好获得心理支持或信息,并强调出院后需要心理健康支持,但没有人提供或提供这种支持:结论:与没有拥抱婴儿的母亲相比,CoolCuddle 干预措施降低了抑郁症的发病率,并提高了出院时母亲与婴儿的亲子关系得分。家长们强调,婴儿在出生时因窒息而被送入新生儿重症监护室后,其产后抑郁程度会增加。
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Mental health of parents with infants in NICU receiving cooling therapy for hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy.

Background: Parents cuddling their babies during intensive care to promote parent-infant bonding is usual practice in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). However, babies undergoing cooling therapy and intensive care are not routinely offered parent-infant cuddles due to concerns of impacting the cooling process or intensive care. We developed the CoolCuddle intervention to enable parents to cuddle babies safely during cooling therapy. We investigated whether CoolCuddle impacted parent-infant bonding and parent's mental health.

Methods: We conducted parental interviews and compared mental health and bonding measures in two cohorts of parents; one with access to CoolCuddle and the other where CoolCuddle was not available.

Results: Ten tertiary NICUs in England and Wales from 2019 to 2023 were involved and 107 families. There were high levels of post-delivery depression amongst all parents. However, at discharge mothers in the CoolCuddle group had significantly less depression, lower EPDS scores, and higher MIBS scores (consistent with better mother-infant bonding) than those where CoolCuddle was not available. All measures appeared similar when re-measured at 8 weeks. Parents reported they were not ready to access psychological support or information whilst on NICU and stressed the need of mental health support following discharge, which was not offered or available.

Conclusion: The CoolCuddle intervention was associated with a lower prevalence of depression and enhanced bonding scores for mothers at discharge compared to those who did not cuddle their babies. Parents highlighted increased levels of postnatal depression following the sudden and traumatic admission of their infant to NICU after birth asphyxia.

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来源期刊
Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology
Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
8.00%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: The Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology reports and reviews outstanding research on psychological, behavioural, medical and social aspects of human reproduction, pregnancy and infancy. Medical topics focus on obstetrics and gynaecology, paediatrics and psychiatry. The growing work in relevant aspects of medical communication and medical sociology are also covered. Relevant psychological work includes developmental psychology, clinical psychology, social psychology, behavioural medicine, psychology of women and health psychology. Research into psychological aspects of midwifery, health visiting and nursing is central to the interests of the Journal. The Journal is of special value to those concerned with interdisciplinary issues. As a result, the Journal is of particular interest to those concerned with fundamental processes in behaviour and to issues of health promotion and service organization.
期刊最新文献
"Learning to 'waltz' rather than 'wrestle' … " : a novel, ultra-brief intervention supporting early child-caregiver relationships. Prenatal representations link pregnancy intention to observed caregiving. Mental health of parents with infants in NICU receiving cooling therapy for hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy. Sensory-processing sensitivity, parenting styles, and adult attachment patterns in parents of young children. LBTQ parents' bonding experiences after complicated births: managing minority stress and traumatic experiences.
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