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Clinical Trials/NCT05005988
NCT05005988
Unknown
Not Applicable

Actions for Empowered Maternal Neonatal Care (ACUNE): Nursing Intervention to Strengthen Mothers' Competence to Care for Their Preterm Infants at Home. A Pilot Study

Universidad de Antioquia1 site in 1 country30 target enrollmentOctober 20, 2021

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Patient Empowerment
Sponsor
Universidad de Antioquia
Enrollment
30
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Change in the caregiver's competence
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The quality of care premature infants receive at home after hospital discharge is critical to their health and well-being. Premature infants require special care, which is why Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs) have processes in place to prepare mothers for discharge. However, this experience is very complex for mothers, who often experience high levels of stress, anxiety, sadness and uncertainty. Mothers need knowledge and skills about caring for a premature infant, but they also need to gain confidence, believe in their abilities, and become empowered to participate more actively and confidently in decisions that have to do with their child's health. Several approaches exist to prepare mothers for home-based infant care; in the present study, an intervention focused on empowerment is proposed as a way to strengthen mothers' competence to care for their preterm infants and improve infant health outcomes. The intervention is expected to have adequate acceptability and feasibility, as well as preliminary evidence that it improves mothers' competence to care for their infants and decreases readmissions, emergency department visits, improves weight gain and health outcomes of preterm infants.

Detailed Description

Premature children have a higher risk of becoming ill and dying than full-term children and that risk do not end with hospitalization, so the care they receive at home is decisive in their health and wellbeing. Preterm infants are especially vulnerable and have a greater number of readmissions and emergency visits after discharge, as well as delays in vaccination, infections as well as nutritional alterations. Women play central in family health, and it is necessary to design and applying interventions to facilitate a woman's empowerment, specially to care premature son at home after Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICU) discharge. Preparation for discharge has been described in the literature as a process where the mothers develop skills and knowledge that they will need to care for their premature children once they are at home. However, for mothers, they face a challenging task in which they experience high levels of stress, fear and uncertainty. Premature children require particular care and the mothers need more than knowledge and skills, they also need to get confidence, believe in their abilities and empowerment themselves to participate more actively and safely in decisions that have to do with the health of their children. This study arises from the need to prepare mothers through the possibilities of empowerment, as a way to improve the health outcomes of premature children. A Randomized Clinical Trial is proposed to establish the effect of the educational intervention of empowerment on mothers' competence in premature infant care, readmissions, weight gain, exclusive breastfeeding and other aspects related to the health, survival and well-being of premature infants. The intervention was designed by integrating the theoretical approach, empirical evidence and the results of a qualitative study in which mothers and fathers of premature infants participated, which gives a participatory approach to the research and makes it close to the parents' reality and gives it social relevance.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
October 20, 2021
End Date
May 30, 2022
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
Female

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

SANDRA PATRICIA OSORIO GALEANO

Principal Investigator

Universidad de Antioquia

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Mothers of premature infants less than 37 weeks gestational age at birth.
  • Mothers of premature infants hospitalized in the neonatal intensive care unit

Exclusion Criteria

  • Mothers with previous experience in caring for a premature infant.
  • Mothers whose children have some type of congenital malformation.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change in the caregiver's competence

Time Frame: At admission (baseline), through hospitalization completion, an average of 3 week and one week after the discharge.

The caregiver's competence is the capacity, ability and preparation that the caregiver has to perform his or her caregiving task at home and can be measured with the CUIDAR scale, which was designed and validated in Colombia. This scale has been used in several studies, confirming its validity and reliability. To determine the validity and reliability of the CUIDAR instrument in mothers of premature infants, a cross-sectional quantitative study was carried out in which its psychometric properties were measured. 207 mothers of premature infants participated. A factor analysis did not confirm the original structure in the new population, but a model with 7 factors and 33 items with a Cronbach's alpha of 0.852 and adequate goodness-of-fit indices. The new version of the scale, named CUIDAR-PreMa, has 7 dimensions: Acting, Coping, Bonding, Social Support, General Knowledge, Singularity and Specific Knowledge. The scale has 33 items, with a Likert-type scale

Secondary Outcomes

  • Readmission(One week after the discharge)
  • Change in premature infant body weight(At admission (baseline), through hospitalization completion, an average of 3 week and one week after the discharge.)
  • Emergency visits(One week after discharge)
  • Exclusive breastfeeding(One week after discharge)

Study Sites (1)

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