在三级心脏和外科新生儿重症监护病房实施皮肤对皮肤护理和父母接触倡议。

Valerie Levesque, Krystal Johnson, Amy McKenzie, Andrea Nykipilo, Barbara Taylor, Chloe Joynt
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:皮肤对皮肤护理(SSC)已被整合为早产儿发育护理的重要组成部分。尽管有文献记载的益处,但由于工作人员的担忧、患者的因素和敏锐度以及环境的限制,SSC并没有在以足月人口为主的心脏和外科新生儿重症监护病房常规实施。目的:本质量改进项目的目的是增加我们心脏和外科新生儿重症监护病房婴儿的SSC、父母拥抱和父母触摸事件。当传统的SSC不可能时,鼓励采用替代握持和替代家长触摸(APT)方法。方法:采用质量改进和定性描述方法评估基线,发展教育和实践变化,并在干预后12和18个月评估SSC, hold和APT方法的使用情况。实现包括教育工具和资源开发、模拟、同行冠军、课堂教学和团队会议。围绕握住和父母触摸的类型的决定是不稳定的,反映了婴儿、家庭、工作人员和物理空间的复杂需求。研究结果:鉴于其最初的稀缺性,SSC的频率增加,持有或APT事件的多样性增加。工作人员调查结果表明支持这种做法,并概述了持续存在的障碍。对实践的启示:皮肤对皮肤的护理,保持和APT的做法是可行和安全的足月和早产儿接受高度仪器和复杂的心脏和外科护理。研究意义:在外科和心脏新生儿重症监护病房,关于干预对婴儿神经发育结果和父母恢复力的影响的未来研究是有必要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implementing a Skin-to-Skin Care and Parent Touch Initiative in a Tertiary Cardiac and Surgical Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.

Background: Skin-to-skin care (SSC) has been integrated as an essential component of developmental care for preterm infants. Despite documented benefits, SSC is not routinely practiced in the cardiac and surgical neonatal intensive care unit, with a predominantly term population, due to staff apprehension, patient factors and acuity, and environmental constraints.

Purpose: The purpose of this quality improvement project was to increase SSC, parental holds, and parent touch events for infants in our cardiac and surgical neonatal intensive care unit. When traditional SSC was not possible, alternative holds and alternative parent touch (APT) methods were encouraged.

Methods: Quality improvement and qualitative descriptive methodology were utilized to assess baseline, develop education and practice changes, and evaluate the use of SSC, holds, and APT methods at 12 and 18 months postintervention. Implementation included educational tools and resource development, simulations, peer champions, in-class teaching, and team huddles. Decisions around the type of hold and parent touch were fluid and reflected complex infant, family, staff, and physical space needs.

Findings: Given its initial scarcity, there was an increased frequency of SSC and variety of holds or APT events. Staff survey results indicated support for the practice and outlined persistent barriers.

Implications for practice: Skin-to-skin care, holds, and APT practices are feasible and safe for term and preterm infants receiving highly instrumented and complex cardiac and surgical care.

Implications for research: Future research regarding the intervention's impact on neurodevelopmental outcomes of infants and on parent resilience in the surgical and cardiac neonatal intensive care unit is warranted.

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