Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03023267

The Contribution of Parent-infant Interaction While Singing During Kangaroo Care, on Preterm-infants' Autonomic Stability and Parental Anxiety Reduction

Open Randomized Study on the Effect of Applying Music Therapy by Therapist in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU).

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (actual)
Sponsor
Meir Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
4 Weeks – 18 Weeks
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The current study will investigate the combination of the two modalities in a mixed-methods design, in order to provide comprehensive knowledge regarding the effects of family-centered MT during KC, on premature-infants' autonomic nervous system stability (measured by parasympathetic tone, physiological vital signs and behavioral states); Parents' anxiety levels; And parents' unique experiences of the intervention. Additionally, the study will analyze separately mothers and fathers to elucidate similar and different effects

Detailed description

Premature infants and their parents are prone to high anxiety levels and a risk of experiencing trauma due to the preterm birth and its implications. Facing various emotional physical and neural high-risk factors may lead to continuous stress reactions in both the infant and parents, affecting their well being, the parent-infant relationship and the infant's medical state outcome. Attending to both infants' emotional and physiological needs of stability and comfort, as well as parents' support, can lead to an improvement in the premature infants' medical state and the parent-infant bonding process. Furthermore, reducing stress reaction facilitates perceptual memory and learning in premature infants. Two well established interventions in the neonatal care aiming to address the varied premature-family needs are Kangaroo care (KC) and Music Therapy (MT). Various research and clinical reports over the last three decades, regarding each modality, has shown beneficial effects in improvement and stabilization of infants' medical state, inclusion of parents in their infants' treatment and in facilitation of meaningful parent-infant interactions to promoting bonding patterns. However, a major lack of rigorous Randomized control studies presenting the clinical applications of MT techniques and methods in the NICU care exists, as well as only few research have positioned the parents in center of investigation, and/or presented their outcome and perspective. Accordingly, only few research have investigated the combination of MT and KC through an RCT. The current study will investigate the combination of the two modalities in a mixed-methods design, in order to provide comprehensive knowledge regarding the effects of family-centered MT during KC, on premature-infants' autonomic nervous system stability (measured by parasympathetic tone, physiological vital signs and behavioral states); Parents' anxiety levels; And parents' unique experiences of the intervention. Additionally, the study will analyze separately mothers and fathers to elucidate similar and different effects

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMusic therapy and Kangaroo careMother holding baby in skin to skin position while singing
BEHAVIORALKangaroo Care aloneMother holding baby in skin to skin position without singing

Timeline

Start date
2017-08-28
Primary completion
2019-10-10
Completion
2019-12-20
First posted
2017-01-18
Last updated
2020-02-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03023267. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.