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RecruitingNCT06458114

Feeling of Caregivers After a Palliative Management of Extreme Premature Babies in Delivery Room.

Feeling of Caregivers After a Palliative Management in Delivery Room of Extreme Premature Babies Not Eligible for Intensive Care : a French Qualitative and Quantitative Monocentric Study.

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
CHU de Reims · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Introduction : The birth of a child is usually a happy event that caregivers working in delivery rooms share with families. Unfortunately, newborns sometimes need palliative care as soon as birth occurs. In France, neonates who were liveborn under 24+0 weeks amenorrhea (date of last mentrual period) or weighing less than 500 grams) usually have non resuscitation in delivery room \[Ancel 2020\]. Some of them are considered as viable (referring to World Health Organisation definition : either term ≥ 22 + 0 amenorrhea week or birth weight ≥ 500 grams), others as nonviable (term \< 22 AW and birth weight ≤500 grams). In France, legislative development over last two decades have allowed the emergence of palliative care in delivery room. In a French survey in 2016, 83% of maternities were confronted at least once a year with this situation.

Detailed description

In France as in other countries, published studies concerning palliative care for extremely premature babies focused on the " grey zon " period, but not on the nonviable preterm infants (also called late miscarriage) who have signs of life at birth. Only a fairly recent French book of 735 pages exclusively dedicated to the palliative approach in perinatal medicine, reports in a single chapter the existence of palliative care in extremely non-viable premature newborns. There is a paucity of articles about the actual experience of caregivers confronted to palliative care of extremely preterm babies, viable or non viable, primarily studies in the so-called "gray" literature. Thus, a midwifery graduation thesis describes the experience of midwives in a French university hospital following the care of babies born alive between 18 and 24 weeks old . Two recent reviews explore the notion of resilience of caregivers who have been involved in perinatal palliative care . A nursing graduation dissertation explores the emotions of caregivers faced with perinatal bereavement . Primary objective: the primary objective of this both qualitative and quantitative monocentric study is to explore the feelings of caregivers (doctors, midwifes, nurse's aids, pediatric nurses) within 2 months of a palliative situation for an extremely preterm baby in a delivery room, viable or not, and not eligible for resuscitation. Secondary objective: the secondary objective of the study is to quantify the impact of this stressful event: * Within the first month (acute stress). * 2 months after the event (post-traumatic stress). Expected impact of the study: * These care situations are not described in the scientific literature and little described in the so-called grey literature: this study aims to make them readable. * The caregiver's feelings and the mechanisms that underlie them may differ, depending on the type of profession and links within a team: this study aims to better characterize and understand them. * As a result, the investigators hope this study will identify avenues for work and action to better support caregivers and prevent work-related burnout.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERAssessment of caregiver feelingThe study group includes any caregiver who supported an extremely preterm newborn in a palliative care approach in the delivery room with as intervention type a questionnaire and individual semi-structured interview.

Timeline

Start date
2022-05-07
Primary completion
2025-01-01
Completion
2025-01-01
First posted
2024-06-13
Last updated
2024-06-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06458114. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.