Abstract

Preterm birth and the subsequent hospitalization in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) is a challenging life event for parents and babies. Stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms, limitations in holding or touching the baby, and medical complications during the NICU stay can negatively affect parental mental health. This can threaten the developing parent-infant relationship and might adversely impact child development. Music therapy in the NICU is an internationally growing field of clinical practice and research and is increasingly applied to promote relationship building between parents and babies. The two most commonly used concepts describing the early parent-infant relationship are ‘attachment’ and ‘bonding’. While frequently used interchangeably in the literature, they are actually not the same and describe distinctive processes of the early relationship formation. Thus, it is important to discuss the overlaps and differences between attachment and bonding and the implications for music therapy clinical practice and research. Whereas providing examples and possible scenarios for music therapists working on either bonding or attachment, the distinction between both concepts is relevant for many health care professionals concerned with early parenting interventions in the NICU. This will hopefully lead to a more precise use of theory, and ultimately, to a more informed clinical practice and research.

Highlights

  • The formation of positive emotional bonds between parents and their baby is one of the most significant foundations in the construction of a healthy parent–infant relationship and fundamental for the newborn’s development later on in life [1,2]

  • Distinctions in focus, measurements and definitions will be outlined and examples of possible scenarios for music therapists working on either attachment or bonding will be described

  • As we have tried to highlight, bonding and attachment share many common features, but describe essentially distinctive processes. While this confusion seems to be superficial at first, it might have an important impact on how early parenting interventions inclusive of Music therapy (MT) in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) are designed, implemented, and evaluated

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Summary

Introduction

The formation of positive emotional bonds between parents and their baby is one of the most significant foundations in the construction of a healthy parent–infant relationship and fundamental for the newborn’s development later on in life [1,2]. This is a process that begins early in pregnancy, lasting throughout its entire period, and continues after childbirth [3,4]. Distinctions in focus, measurements and definitions will be outlined and examples of possible scenarios for music therapists working on either attachment or bonding will be described

Early Parenting Interventions and Family-Centered Music Therapy in the NICU
Attachment versus Bonding
Attachment
Bonding
Overlaps and Differences
Discussion
Clinical Practice–NICU MT for Attachment
Clinical Practice–NICU MT for Bonding
Findings
MT Research in the NICU–Bonding or Attachment?
Conclusions
Full Text
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