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Caregiver presence and involvement in a Canadian neonatal intensive care unit: an observational cohort study

Caregiver presence and involvement in a Canadian neonatal intensive care unit: an observational cohort study
Caregiver presence and involvement in a Canadian neonatal intensive care unit: an observational cohort study

Background: presence in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a vital step for caregivers initiating involvement, such as skin-to-skin contact, holding or singing/reading to their newborn. Little is known about caregiver presence and involvement in Canadian NICU's context by caregiver type (mother, father, other), and the association between maternal presence and key maternal and newborn characteristics. 

Purpose: the primary objective was to examine the presence and involvement of family caregivers in the NICU. The secondary objective was to examine the relationship between maternal presence and maternal and newborn characteristics. 

Design and methods: a prospective observational cohort study in an open bay setting of an Eastern Canadian NICU. Presence (physically present at the newborn's bedside) and involvement (e.g., skin-to-skin, singing/reading) were tracked daily by families in the NICU until discharge. Demographic information was also collected. 

Results: participants included 142 mothers and their newborns. Mothers were present 8.7 h/day, fathers were present 4.1 h/day, and other caregivers were present 1.8 h/day in the NICU in the first 34 days. Mothers were involved in care activities 50% of the time they were present in the NICU, whereas fathers and other caregivers were spending 20% and 6% of their time respectively. Regression identified maternal age, distance to home, parity, birthweight, and length of stay to be statistically significant variables related to maternal presence. 

Conclusions: there is variation in presence and involvement by caregiver type. Targeted interventions to maintain and increase mothers, fathers and other caregivers' presence and involvement in care throughout their stay in the NICU are recommended.

Caregiver involvement, Caregiver presence, Family integrated care, NICU, Preterm infants
0882-5963
123-129
Kim, Theresa H.M.
d73a08f3-1c49-4e8b-924c-715321b70ce0
Campbell-Yeo, Marsha
fd416bfc-eef1-401e-8652-c049fb65e42a
Disher, Tim
3096c107-d6ed-441c-9b60-7f9747f2ed74
Dol, Justine
a1ba7653-3a47-439e-b9a4-904c400c80c3
Richardson, Brianna
86113b5b-1951-4094-ab16-c52ccff1e364
Bishop, Tanya
66262b7c-2a63-42e0-a75c-c0245f850169
Delahunty-Pike, Alannah
140965d2-8b6f-4808-b957-5aefe16e2bc1
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Glover, Megan
da8c6dd2-8a8e-4911-b47e-fc883822df2c
Inglis, Darlene
ebafbffc-1b74-4f4c-8c61-d38fad3f014a
Johnson, Teresa
a5d4ceff-24b0-4282-8307-fb2e6675186c
Lalanne, Denise
a747e134-dda9-4798-8ecd-db18f95f0b04
Mcmillan, Doug
e060812b-efdf-44f2-a24c-ef51a9e52a61
Mcgrath, Patrick
b220ecbb-0c16-45d2-833f-ee4a0678bb76
Monaghan, Joelle
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Orovec, Adele
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Simpson, David C.
d2ff4afd-669d-4f9c-8bc4-4b55a6f63054
Skinner, Natasha
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Wozney, Lori
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Whitehead, Leah
3ab3442b-e223-4e55-bcb4-07898569d501
Chez NICU Home team in alphabetical order
Kim, Theresa H.M.
d73a08f3-1c49-4e8b-924c-715321b70ce0
Campbell-Yeo, Marsha
fd416bfc-eef1-401e-8652-c049fb65e42a
Disher, Tim
3096c107-d6ed-441c-9b60-7f9747f2ed74
Dol, Justine
a1ba7653-3a47-439e-b9a4-904c400c80c3
Richardson, Brianna
86113b5b-1951-4094-ab16-c52ccff1e364
Bishop, Tanya
66262b7c-2a63-42e0-a75c-c0245f850169
Delahunty-Pike, Alannah
140965d2-8b6f-4808-b957-5aefe16e2bc1
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Glover, Megan
da8c6dd2-8a8e-4911-b47e-fc883822df2c
Inglis, Darlene
ebafbffc-1b74-4f4c-8c61-d38fad3f014a
Johnson, Teresa
a5d4ceff-24b0-4282-8307-fb2e6675186c
Lalanne, Denise
a747e134-dda9-4798-8ecd-db18f95f0b04
Mcmillan, Doug
e060812b-efdf-44f2-a24c-ef51a9e52a61
Mcgrath, Patrick
b220ecbb-0c16-45d2-833f-ee4a0678bb76
Monaghan, Joelle
c0db1766-3c4d-449b-993b-c7f719998018
Orovec, Adele
5072daf1-5c7b-4363-86a3-ba45c7b0e30c
Simpson, David C.
d2ff4afd-669d-4f9c-8bc4-4b55a6f63054
Skinner, Natasha
9ec4157e-0d10-4bc3-8791-09a6b30c5e76
Wozney, Lori
88ebe62a-b509-47cf-b732-d8f3cba94a13
Whitehead, Leah
3ab3442b-e223-4e55-bcb4-07898569d501

Kim, Theresa H.M., Campbell-Yeo, Marsha, Disher, Tim, Dol, Justine, Richardson, Brianna, Bishop, Tanya, Delahunty-Pike, Alannah, Dorling, Jon, Glover, Megan, Inglis, Darlene, Johnson, Teresa, Lalanne, Denise, Mcmillan, Doug, Mcgrath, Patrick, Monaghan, Joelle, Orovec, Adele, Simpson, David C., Skinner, Natasha, Wozney, Lori and Whitehead, Leah , Chez NICU Home team in alphabetical order (2021) Caregiver presence and involvement in a Canadian neonatal intensive care unit: an observational cohort study. Journal of Pediatric Nursing, 60, 123-129. (doi:10.1016/j.pedn.2021.04.023).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: presence in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a vital step for caregivers initiating involvement, such as skin-to-skin contact, holding or singing/reading to their newborn. Little is known about caregiver presence and involvement in Canadian NICU's context by caregiver type (mother, father, other), and the association between maternal presence and key maternal and newborn characteristics. 

Purpose: the primary objective was to examine the presence and involvement of family caregivers in the NICU. The secondary objective was to examine the relationship between maternal presence and maternal and newborn characteristics. 

Design and methods: a prospective observational cohort study in an open bay setting of an Eastern Canadian NICU. Presence (physically present at the newborn's bedside) and involvement (e.g., skin-to-skin, singing/reading) were tracked daily by families in the NICU until discharge. Demographic information was also collected. 

Results: participants included 142 mothers and their newborns. Mothers were present 8.7 h/day, fathers were present 4.1 h/day, and other caregivers were present 1.8 h/day in the NICU in the first 34 days. Mothers were involved in care activities 50% of the time they were present in the NICU, whereas fathers and other caregivers were spending 20% and 6% of their time respectively. Regression identified maternal age, distance to home, parity, birthweight, and length of stay to be statistically significant variables related to maternal presence. 

Conclusions: there is variation in presence and involvement by caregiver type. Targeted interventions to maintain and increase mothers, fathers and other caregivers' presence and involvement in care throughout their stay in the NICU are recommended.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 21 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 May 2021
Published date: 1 May 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: Aspects of this study were funded through partnered funding for a larger study from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA), Canada; IWK Health Centre, Nova Scotia, Canada; and Cisco Canada . This study was part of the Chez NICU Home project, funded by the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, IWK Foundation, and Cisco Systems Canada. The authors would like to acknowledge and thank the caregivers who participated in the study, in addition to the NICU team and research staff at the IWK Health Centre.
Keywords: Caregiver involvement, Caregiver presence, Family integrated care, NICU, Preterm infants

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485126
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485126
ISSN: 0882-5963
PURE UUID: 4931dee7-6c9a-47a5-8619-7bea63e97493
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 29 Nov 2023 18:16
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: Theresa H.M. Kim
Author: Marsha Campbell-Yeo
Author: Tim Disher
Author: Justine Dol
Author: Brianna Richardson
Author: Tanya Bishop
Author: Alannah Delahunty-Pike
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Author: Megan Glover
Author: Darlene Inglis
Author: Teresa Johnson
Author: Denise Lalanne
Author: Doug Mcmillan
Author: Patrick Mcgrath
Author: Joelle Monaghan
Author: Adele Orovec
Author: David C. Simpson
Author: Natasha Skinner
Author: Lori Wozney
Author: Leah Whitehead
Corporate Author: Chez NICU Home team in alphabetical order

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