Abstract
Results Of the 323 eligible neonatal care units, 162 (50.1%) participated and 160 (98.8%) reported using KC. Instructions for the staff are provided in 39 (25.2%) units, 16 (10.3%) for parents and 64 (41.4%) have hygienical regulations for parents. Special chairs are provided in 143 (89.4%) units, 29 (85.3%) use music, 7 (20.6%) light and 2 (5.9%) aromatherapy as complementary methods. Fifty-one (31.5%) provide security precautions, 22 (26.8%) of them a transcutanous O2/CO2 probe, 15 (18.3%) a limited number of infants at the same time, and 20 (24.4%) require a physician in close distance. A certain gestational age in 146 units (91.25%) and 142 (88.7%) a certain bodyweight are considered as limits. One hundred thirty-eight (86.25%) have a limitation of days of life before KC. In 63 (38.9%) the gestational age and 69 (42.6%) the birth weight had no influence on first KC. Fifty-two (32.1%) use KC no matter of the infants’ age. Thirty-five (21.6%) departments have other preconditions, where cranial ultrasound is the most common (n=27, 45%). Conclusion This is the first survey on practical aspects of kangaroocare in Germany. Most neonatal units provide hygienical regulations for staff and parents. Special equipment such as KC-chairs is quite common as well as adding music as a complementary feature. Limitations regarding birth weight and gestational age are more common than other precautions. In conclusion the results could be helpful for clinical studies, especially to describe and compare the used setting or to design a joint concept if multicentre studies need comparable conditions.
Highlights
Kangaroo care is a technique practiced on newborn infants wherein the infant is held, skin-to-skin, with an adult
A semi-structured questionnaire has been sent to all pediatric departments with neonatological units in Germany as published in the German hospital list and the German Society of Neonatology (GNPI)
After 6 weeks a reminder was sent by e-mail. This is the first survey on practical aspects of kangaroocare in Germany
Summary
Kangaroo care is a technique practiced on newborn infants wherein the infant is held, skin-to-skin, with an adult. Kangarooing in German neonatology departments: results of a nationwide survey From International Research Congress on Integrative Medicine and Health 2012 Portland, Oregon, USA. Purpose Kangaroo care is a technique practiced on newborn infants wherein the infant is held, skin-to-skin, with an adult.
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