1. Family-centred care and breastfeeding self-efficacy determined how ready mothers were for their infants to be discharged from a neonatal intensive care unit.
- Author
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Lebel V, Argiropoulos N, Robins S, Charbonneau L, and Feeley N
- Subjects
- Infant, Female, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Breast Feeding, Patient Discharge, Infant, Premature, Self Efficacy, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Mothers
- Abstract
Aim: We examined if a range of factors were associated with how ready mothers were for their infants to be discharged from a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU)., Methods: This was a secondary analysis of a study on the well-being of mothers whose infants were hospitalised in the level 3 NICU at the Jewish General Hospital in Canada. We studied 132 mother-infant dyads: 70 from an open ward NICU and 62 from the purpose-built NICU with pods or single-family rooms that replaced it in 2016. The mothers completed a questionnaire on NICU stress and their perceptions of family-centred care on enrolment and another on breastfeeding self-efficacy and readiness to go home a week before discharge. The infants' characteristics were retrieved from the medical files., Results: The infants were born at a mean age of 29.8 ± 3.1 weeks. Greater family-centred care during early hospitalisation (p = 0.01) and greater breastfeeding self-efficacy in the period before discharge (p = 0.04) were significantly associated with higher readiness for discharge. The unit design was not significantly associated with readiness for discharge., Conclusion: The quality of early family-centred care and breastfeeding self-efficacy were significantly associated with how ready mothers were for their preterm infant to be discharged from the NICU., (© 2022 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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