The skin-to-skin contact maneuver (kangaroo) has shown benefits in newborn babies. This is two-arm randomized open clinical trial to evaluate whether the use of a scarf specifically designed to facilitate the skin-to-skin method is effective in terms of increasing the skin-to-skin mother-neonate time, compared to traditional clinical practice. Mothers of full-term babies with expected delivery in the study centers will be included. Those mothers with a language barrier that prevents collaboration in the study procedures, cognitive impairment or morbid obesity will be excluded. The primary endpoint is the average daily skin-to-skin time during hospital admission days. A superiority analysis will be made in terms of the skin-to-skin time of the intervention arm, compared to the control arm.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
143
Scarf specifically designed to facilitate mother-neonate skin-to-skin contact
Participants will receive the usual clinical practice
Consorci Sanitari Alt Penedes i Garraf
Sant Pere de Ribes, Barcelona, Spain
Mother-neonate skin-to-skin contact time (number of hours)
Number of hours of skin-to-skin contact maneuver (kangaroo)
Time frame: 72 hours
Time in arms or in physical contact of the neonate with the mother / father
Number of hours in arms or in physical contact of the neonate with the mother / father
Time frame: 72 hours
Time of crying
Number of hours crying
Time frame: 72 hours
Newborn weight loss
Weight change in grams
Time frame: 72 hours
Parents satisfaction with hospital care
Parents satisfaction (structured interview)
Time frame: 72 hours
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