Newborns may experience pain, stress, and physiological changes during and after birth. Appropriate nursing care during this period can reduce negative effects by increasing the baby's comfort. Kolbaba's Comfort Theory aims to provide holistic care by supporting physical, psychological, environmental, and sociocultural comfort. This study aims to investigate the effects of nursing interventions based on Kolcaba's theory on pain, comfort, crying duration, and physiological parameters (heart rate, respiratory rate, SpO₂, body temperature, etc.) in noenates delivered vaginally. The findings aim to reveal the contribution of comfort-focused approaches in noenates care to clinical outcomes.
Newborns may experience pain, stress, and physiological changes during and after birth. Appropriate nursing care during this period can reduce negative effects by increasing the baby's comfort. Kolbaba's Comfort Theory aims to provide holistic care by supporting physical, psychological, environmental, and sociocultural comfort. This study aims to investigate the effects of nursing interventions based on Kolcaba's theory on pain, comfort, crying duration, and physiological parameters (heart rate, respiratory rate, SpO₂, body temperature, etc.) in noenates delivered vaginally. The findings aim to reveal the contribution of comfort-focused approaches in noenates care to clinical outcomes. Kolcaban's Comfort Theory for Care in the Delivery Room Intervention Group: 1\. Physical sub-dimension; 2. Psychospiritual comfort sub-dimension: White noise playback; skin-to-skin contact; gentle touch; 3. Sociocultural comfort sub-dimension: Family-centered care (providing contact with parents), respect for cultural practices; 4. Care will be provided in accordance with the Environmental Comfort sub-dimension.. Research Population and Sample: The study will be conducted on newborns born vaginally in the maternity ward and whose parents are eligible and agree to participate in the study. Sample: This study will be conducted on newborns selected on a voluntary basis, meeting the inclusion criteria, gestational age 38-42 weeks, 2500-4000 g, and an Apgar score ≥7. Sample Size: The number determined by power analysis, e.g., 60 infants (30 experimental, 30 control). Study Inclusion Criteria: The baby was born vaginally; the gestational age was 38 weeks or older; the baby had no congenital anomalies; the baby had a Power (1-β err prob); the baby was breathing spontaneously; the baby did not require oxygen support; the baby was a singleton; the baby had an Apgar score between 7 and 10 at the 1st and 5th minutes; The first invasive procedure was the administration of vitamin K and hepatitis B vaccine; the same researcher performed the intramuscular injection on each baby; no assistive equipment was used during birth; and the family agreed to participate in the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
60
Delivery Room Nursing Care Based on Kolcaba's Comfort Theory
Yuzuncu Yıl University
Van, Tuşba, Turkey (Türkiye)
COMFORTneo Scale
The COMFORTneo scale is a validated Likert-type tool assessing neonatal comfort, pain, and distress through six behavioral parameters (facial tension, muscle tone, crying, alertness, calmness/agitation, respiratory response, and body movements). Scores range from 6 (optimal comfort) to 30 (severe distress), with 4-6 indicating moderate and 7-10 severe pain/distress (van Dijk et al., 2005).
Time frame: From the starting point to at least the second hour
Neonatal Pain Scale
The NIPS uses 1 physiological (respiratory pattern) and 5 behavioral parameters (crying, alertness, facial expression, arm/leg movements) to assess pain in newborns. The scale is scored from 0 to 7, with higher scores indicating severe pain.
Time frame: From the starting point to at least the second hour
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