Abstract

Our aim was to investigate what effect immediate skin-to-skin contact with a parent had on the cardiorespiratory stabilisation of very preterm infants. This randomised clinical trial was conducted during 2018-2021 at two university hospitals with three neonatal intensive care units in Norway and Sweden. Infants born from 28+0 to 32+6weeks of gestation were randomised to immediate skin-to-skin contact with a parent for the first six postnatal hours or standard incubator care. The outcome was a composite cardiorespiratory stability score, based on serial measures of heart and respiratory rate, respiratory support, fraction of inspired oxygen and oxygen saturation. We recruited 91 newborn infants with a mean gestational age of 31+1 (range 28+4-32+6) weeks and mean birth weight of 1534 (range 555-2440)g: 46 received immediate skin-to-skin contact and 45 received incubator care. The group who received skin-to-skin contact had an adjusted mean score of 0.52higher (95% confidence interval 0.38-0.67, p<0.001) on a scale from zero to six when compared to the control group. Immediate skin-to-skin contact for the first six postnatal hours had beneficial effects on the cardiorespiratory stabilisation of very preterm infants.

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