Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00306605

Emotional Experiences in Fathers of NICU Infants

Emotional Experiences in Fathers of NICU Babies: A Comparison of Fathers in Medical and Surgical NICUs.

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
35 (actual)
Sponsor
Christiana Care Health Services · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study is designed to evaluate the emotional experiences of fathers who have preterm infants who are hospitalized in a (neonatal intensive care unit)NICU setting. In addition, we will compare the emotional responses experienced by father of surgical NICU babies and fathers of medical NICU babies. Our primary hypothesis is that paternal stress levels will be lower for those fathers of infants who are hospitalized in a medical NICU compared with fathers of infants who are hospitalized in a surgical NICU. Secondary hypotheses include: 1) Stress levels for fathers of hospitalized infants will decrease over time; 2) Depressive symptomatology modulates perceived stress in fathers of NICU infants.

Detailed description

It is well known that birth and hospitalization of a preterm infant is stressful for parents. Numerous studies have evaluated emotional factors such as maternal stress, parental role alteration, and maternal depression. Researchers have also investigated both maternal and paternal emotional responses in relation to their infant being hospitalized in the NICU. Studies examining paternal response alone have received less research attention. To date, no studies have compared the emotional response of fathers of medical NICU babies and fathers of surgical NICU babies. The purpose of this study is to evaluate and compare perceived paternal stress and depressive symptomatology in fathers of preterm medical and surgical infants. Fathers who agree to participate will be given a questionnaire that is comprised of two self-report tools. Together these tools should take approximately 15-20 minutes to complete. Fathers who participate will be asked to complete these tools at three different times throughout their infants' stay in the NICU.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALQuestionnaireParticipants will be asked to complete a questionnaire 3 times throughout the first 5 weeks after their infant's birth / hospitalization

Timeline

Start date
2006-03-01
Primary completion
2008-09-01
Completion
2008-11-01
First posted
2006-03-24
Last updated
2017-06-21

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00306605. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.