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Hammock Position and Nesting in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Behavior, Nesting
Behavior, Child
Interventions
Behavioral: Nesting
Behavioral: Hammock Position
Registration Number
NCT06209060
Lead Sponsor
Maltepe University
Brief Summary

This research aims to determine the effect of hammock position and nesting practices on the comfort level and physiological parameters of preterm babies.

Detailed Description

The study will be conducted with the randomized controlled experimental method. The sample size determined in the sample width analysis was determined as 72 babies (hammock position group: 36 babies; nesting group: 36 babies) with an effect size of 0.6, alpha error probability of 0.05, and a power value of 0.80. A sample of 72 preterm neonates will be randomly assigned into two equal groups. Neonates in the hammock position group will be placed in a hammock created by the researchers inside the incubator. Neonates in the nesting group will be placed in a nest created by the researchers within the incubator. Babies will be fed and their diapers changed before being positioned. These positions will be applied to babies for one hour every day for 5 consecutive days. Before positioning, the pulse oximeter device will be attached to the baby's foot, and its physiological parameters will be evaluated by remaining on the baby's foot for the duration of the positioning. During the one-hour position, no invasive procedures or diaper changes will be performed on the babies, the baby will not be touched, only observation will be made. The babies' comfort levels will be evaluated with the 'Newborn Comfort Behavior Scale' 5 minutes before positioning, at the 2nd, 20th, 40th, 60th minutes of positioning and 5 minutes after positioning, and their physiological parameters will be measured. The babies' comfort level will be evaluated independently by two observers.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
72
Inclusion Criteria
  • Preterm babies between 32-37 weeks of gestation
  • The weight of the baby is 1500 grams and above,
  • Postnatal age is 3 days or more,
  • Preterm babies who have been in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for more than 24 hours,
  • The baby is fed intermittently for more than 60 minutes,
  • 30 minutes have passed since feeding,
  • Do not perform procedures such as peripheral vascular access, blood collection, or gastric tube placement on the baby within the last hour before being taken into the study,
  • Not applying phototherapy to the baby,
  • No problems with the central nervous system such as cranial bleeding, convulsion, hypertonia,
  • The baby does not have any congenital anomalies or respiratory distress,
  • The baby does not receive oxygen support and is not connected to a respirator.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Babies younger than 32 weeks of gestation and older than 37 weeks of gestation
  • The baby's weight is below 1500 grams,
  • Postnatal age is less than 3 days,
  • Preterm babies who have been in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit for less than 24 hours,
  • The baby is fed at intervals of less than 60 minutes,
  • Less than 30 minutes have passed since feeding,
  • Performing procedures such as peripheral vascular access, blood collection, and gastric tube placement on the baby within the last hour before being taken into the study,
  • Applying phototherapy to the baby,
  • Having a problem with the central nervous system such as cranial hemorrhage, convulsion, hypertonia,
  • Presence of the baby's congenital anomaly or respiratory distress,
  • The baby receives oxygen support and is connected to a respirator.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Nesting GroupNestingBabies in the nesting group will be placed in a nest created by the researchers within the incubator.
Hammock Position GroupHammock PositionBabies in the hammock position group will be placed in a hammock created by the researchers inside the incubator.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Comfort Level5 minutes before positioning the neonate, at the 2nd, 20th, 40th, 60th minute of positioning the neonate, 5 minutes after positioning the neonate.

The preterm babies' comfort levels will be determined using the Newborn Comfort Behavior Scale (COMFORTneo). COMFORTneo is a Likert-type scale consisting of six parameters: alertness, calmness/agitation, respiratory response, crying, body movements, facial tension, and muscle tone. In addition to determining comfort, the Newborn Comfort Behavior Scale allows nurses to evaluate the baby's pain and distress. It has been stated that the lowest score that can be obtained from the Newborn Comfort Behavior Scale is 6 and the highest score is 30. COMFORTneo score values under 13 indicate no pain or stress, values between 14 and 21 indicate moderate pain or stress, and values between 22 and 30 indicate severe pain or stress.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Heart Rate5 minutes before positioning the neonate, at the 2nd, 20th, 40th, 60th minute of positioning the neonate, 5 minutes after positioning the neonate.

The researchers recorded the neonates' heart rate from the ECG monitor

Respiration Rate5 minutes before positioning the neonate, at the 2nd, 20th, 40th, 60th minute of positioning the neonate, 5 minutes after positioning the neonate.

The researchers recorded the neonates' respiration rate from the ECG monitor

Oxygen Saturation5 minutes before positioning the neonate, at the 2nd, 20th, 40th, 60th minute of positioning the neonate, 5 minutes after positioning the neonate.

The researchers recorded the neonates' oxygen saturation from the ECG monitor

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Maltepe University

🇹🇷

Istanbul, Turkey

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