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Exploring Stress and Stress-Reduction With Caregivers and Clinicians in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit to Inform Intervention Development: Qualitative Interview Study

Exploring Stress and Stress-Reduction With Caregivers and Clinicians in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit to Inform Intervention Development: Qualitative Interview Study

Additionally, New Zealand European babies are less likely to be admitted to NICU than these 3 groups [9]. Effective interventions to reduce the distress of parents with babies in the NICU are well described in the literature, but this research has been conducted primarily in Europe and North America, and mostly with Caucasian mothers [10,11]. To our knowledge, few interventions of this sort have been developed in Australasia, and none have been developed or tested in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Kristin Harrison Ginsberg, Jane Alsweiler, Jenny Rogers, Phoebe Ross, Anna Serlachius

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e66401

Perceived Acceptability of Technology Modalities for the Provision of Universal Child and Family Health Nursing Support in the First 6-8 Months After Birth: Cross-Sectional Study

Perceived Acceptability of Technology Modalities for the Provision of Universal Child and Family Health Nursing Support in the First 6-8 Months After Birth: Cross-Sectional Study

Participants were approached in descending order of their child’s date of birth (ie, parents of older babies were approached first). One week after information statements were mailed, non-Aboriginal women were contacted via telephone and invited by a female interviewer to participate in the survey through a CATI. Women received up to 10 phone attempts over a two-week period to invite study participation.

Tessa Delaney, Jacklyn K Jackson, Alison L Brown, Christophe Lecathelinais, Luke Wolfenden, Nayerra Hudson, Sarah Young, Daniel Groombridge, Jessica Pinfold, Paul David Craven, Sinead Redman, John Wiggers, Melanie Kingsland, Margaret Hayes, Rachel Sutherland

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e59191

Assessing the Evidence for Nonobstetric Risk Factors for Deformational Plagiocephaly: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Assessing the Evidence for Nonobstetric Risk Factors for Deformational Plagiocephaly: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Second, during the first months of life, babies develop a head position preference [47], and this preference is more often to the right [44,48]. The increased compressive forces on one side of the head for prolonged periods causes flattening on the side being compressed. It has been proposed that the position of the fetus in the later stages of pregnancy may, in part, be responsible for position preference [28,49].

Christopher Robert Timothy Hillyar, Natalie Bishop, Anjan Nibber, Frances Jean Bell-Davies, Juling Ong

Interact J Med Res 2024;13:e55695

Parental Autonomy in the Care of Premature Newborns and the Experience of a Neonatal Team: Observational Prospective Study

Parental Autonomy in the Care of Premature Newborns and the Experience of a Neonatal Team: Observational Prospective Study

A responsible professional was assigned to each family to monitor the autonomy of the parents in caring for their babies. In addition, professionals received file books with the criteria and indicators that parents had to meet to advance in every step. The families who recorded the dates of autonomy in all areas of care on their road maps were included. Autonomy scores were not based on whether the primary caregiver was the mother or the father.

Salvador Piris-Borregas, Beatriz Bellón-Vaquerizo, Leticia Velasco-Echeburúa, Lidia Niño-Díaz, Susana Sánchez-Aparicio, María López-Maestro, Carmen Rosa Pallás-Alonso

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e55411

Photos Shared on Facebook in the Context of Safe Sleep Recommendations: Content Analysis of Images

Photos Shared on Facebook in the Context of Safe Sleep Recommendations: Content Analysis of Images

For instance, the Safe Sleep for Babies Act of 2021 [28], which bans inclined sleepers and crib bumpers, only passed in 2022 despite documentation that such devices have contributed to infant deaths since the 1990s [32]. Health care organizations and personnel should aim to emulate a comfortable environment where parents can engage in open discussions about their infant sleeping practices.

Kelly Pretorius, Sookja Kang, Eunju Choi

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e54610

Investigating Father or Partner Involvement in Family Integrated Care in Neonatal Units With TARGET (Fathers and Partners in Family Integrated Care): Protocol for a Prospective, Multicenter, Multiphase Study

Investigating Father or Partner Involvement in Family Integrated Care in Neonatal Units With TARGET (Fathers and Partners in Family Integrated Care): Protocol for a Prospective, Multicenter, Multiphase Study

The UK government has recently recognized the importance of maternal and paternal presence for babies in the NU via the Neonatal Care (Leave and Pay) Act, which achieved royal assent in May 2023 granting parents up to an additional 12 weeks of leave [18]. Hence, we developed a study protocol to investigate and enhance fathers’ or partners’ involvement in FICare and its impact on their MH. This study will be the first to report on fathers’ experiences of FICare in the NU with extremely premature babies.

Rupa Rubinstein, Katie Gallagher, John Ho, Julian Bose, Minesh Khashu, Narendra Aladangady

JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e53160