Abstract

To assess whether Family Integrated Care (FICare) in the neonatal intensive care unit improves maternal chronic physiological stress and child behavior at 18months of corrected age for infants born preterm. Follow-up of a multicenter, prospective cluster-randomized controlled trial comparing FICare and standard care of children born at <33weeks of gestation and parents, stratified by tertiary neonatal intensive care units, across Canada. Primary outcomes at 18months of corrected age were maternal stress hormones (cortisol, ie, hair cumulative cortisol [HCC], dehydroepiandrosterone [DHEA]) assayed from hair samples. Secondary outcomes included maternal reports of parenting stress, child behaviors (Internalizing, Externalizing, Dysregulation), and observer-rated caregiving behaviors. Outcomes were analyzed using multilevel modeling. We included 126 mother-child dyads from 12 sites (6 FICare sites, n=83; 6 standard care sites, n=43). FICare intervention significantly lowered maternal physiological stress as indicated by HCC (B=-0.22 [-0.41, -0.04]) and cortisol/DHEA ratio (B=-0.25 [-0.48, -0.02]), but not DHEA (B=0.01 [-0.11, 0.14]). Enrollment in FICare led to lower child Internalizing (B=-0.93 [-2.33, 0.02]) and Externalizing behavior T scores (B=-0.91 [-2.25, -0.01]) via improvements to maternal HCC (mediation). FICare buffered the negative effects of high maternal HCC on child Dysregulation T scores (B=-11.40 [-23.01, 0.21]; moderation). For mothers reporting high parenting stress at 18months, FICare was related to lower Dysregulation T scores via maternal HCC; moderated mediation=-0.17 (-0.41, -0.01). FICare has long-term beneficial effects for mother and child, attenuating maternal chronic physiological stress, and improving child behavior in toddlerhood. NCT01852695.

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