Abstract

To examine the relationship between inpatient skin-to-skin care rates and neurodevelopmental scores measured at 12months in very preterm (VPT) infants. From a retrospective review of medical records of 181 VPT infants (<32weeks gestational age [GA] at birth), we derived skin-to-skin care rate, ie, total minutes of skin-to-skin care each infant received over the number of days of hospital stay. We used scores on the Capute Scales from routine follow-up assessments at 12months to measure neurodevelopmental outcomes. Families averaged approximately 17minutes/day of skin-to-skin care (2days/week, 70minutes/session), although there was substantial variability. Variation in skin-to-skin rate was positively associated with outcomes at 12months corrected age (r=0.25, P<.001). Skin-to-skin rate significantly predicted 6.2% unique variance in 12-month neurodevelopmental outcomes, after adjusting for GA, socioeconomic status (SES), health acuity, and visitation frequency. A 20-minute increase in skin-to-skin care per day was associated with a 10-point increase (0.67 SDs) in neurodevelopmental outcomes at 12months. GA and infant health acuity did not moderate these relations. VPT infants who experienced more skin-to-skin care during hospitalization demonstrated higher scores on 12-month neurodevelopmental assessments. Results provide evidence that skin-to-skin care confers extended benefits to VPT infants through the first year of life. Skin-to-skin care offers promise as a family-centered intervention designed to promote positive developmental outcomes in at-risk infants.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call