Abstract
ObjectiveTo understand the experiences of caregivers using baby carriers to hold their infant after discharge from the NICU. DesignThe qualitative research design was transcendental phenomenology. Setting/Local ProblemCaregiving of NICU graduates is associated with greater incidence of depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder, which can impair caregivers’ abilities to form secure attachments with their infants. In addition, lack of paid parental leave, especially among those of low socioeconomic status, can result in prolonged separations between infants and caregivers in the NICU, producing toxic stressors. ParticipantsEight caregivers ages 21 to 41 years whose infants were discharged from the NICU of a regional referral academic medical center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Homogenous convenience sampling was used by posting recruitment flyers in common areas of the NICU frequented by family members. Intervention/MeasurementsParticipants were educated before discharge on using baby carriers that held their infants in kangaroo position. They were asked to carry their infant in the carrier for 3 hours a day for the 2-month study period. ResultsSix total themes were identified; four were previously identified in kangaroo care and skin-to-skin care research: Decreased Stress and Anxiety, Calmness and Sleep, Attachment, and Parental Empowerment; two were independent to this study: Ease of Work and Self-Care. ConclusionThe themes identified indicate that babywearing has the potential to address harms—such as stress, fear, depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder—that may be experienced by caregivers of infants discharged from the NICU. Babywearing can be used as an intervention to support caregivers and promote positive health outcomes after a NICU discharge.
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