Bryanton Janet, Beck Cheryl T, Montelpare William
School of Nursing, University of Prince Edward Island, 550 University Avenue, Charlottetown, Canada, C1A 4P3.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Nov 28;2013(11):CD004068. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004068.pub4.
Many learning needs arise in the early postpartum period, and it is important to examine interventions used to educate new parents about caring for their newborns during this time.
The primary objective was to assess the effects of structured postnatal education delivered to an individual or group related to infant general health or care and parent-infant relationships.
We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group's Trials Register (31 March 2013).
We included randomized controlled trials of any structured postnatal education provided to individual parents or groups of parents within the first two months post-birth related to the health or care of an infant or parent-infant relationships.
Two review authors (JB, CTB) assessed trial quality and extracted data from published reports.
Of the 27 trials (3949 mothers and 579 fathers) that met the inclusion criteria, only 15 (2922 mothers and 388 fathers) reported useable data. Educational interventions included: five on infant sleep enhancement, 12 on infant behaviour, three on general post-birth health, three on general infant care, and four on infant safety. Details of the randomization procedures, allocation concealment, blinding, and participant loss were often not reported. Of the outcomes analyzed, only 13 were measured similarly enough by more than one study to be combined in meta-analyses. Of these 13 meta-analyses, only four were found to have a low enough level of heterogeneity to provide an overall estimate of effect. Education about sleep enhancement resulted in a mean difference of 29 more night-time minutes of infant sleep in 24 hours at six weeks of age (95% confidence interval (CI) 18.53 to 39.73) than usual care. However, it had no significant effect on the mean difference in minutes of crying time in 24 hours at six weeks and 12 weeks of age. Education related to infant behaviour increased maternal knowledge of infant behaviour by a mean difference of 2.85 points (95% CI 1.78 to 3.91).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The benefits of educational programs to participants and their newborns remain unclear. Education related to sleep enhancement appears to increase infant sleep but appears to have no effect on infant crying time. Education about infant behaviour potentially enhances mothers' knowledge; however more and larger, well-designed studies are needed to confirm these findings.
产后早期会出现许多学习需求,因此研究在此期间用于教育新父母照顾新生儿的干预措施很重要。
主要目的是评估针对个体或群体进行的结构化产后教育对婴儿一般健康或护理以及亲子关系的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane妊娠与分娩组试验注册库(2013年3月31日)。
我们纳入了在出生后两个月内针对个体父母或父母群体提供的任何与婴儿健康或护理或亲子关系相关的结构化产后教育的随机对照试验。
两位综述作者(JB、CTB)评估试验质量并从已发表的报告中提取数据。
在符合纳入标准的27项试验(3949名母亲和579名父亲)中,只有15项(2922名母亲和388名父亲)报告了可用数据。教育干预措施包括:5项关于改善婴儿睡眠,12项关于婴儿行为,3项关于产后一般健康,3项关于婴儿一般护理,4项关于婴儿安全。随机化程序、分配隐藏、盲法和参与者失访的细节往往未报告。在分析的结果中,只有13项结果被不止一项研究以足够相似的方式测量,从而可以合并进行荟萃分析。在这13项荟萃分析中,只有4项被发现异质性水平足够低,可以提供总体效应估计。关于改善睡眠的教育导致在六周龄时,婴儿24小时夜间睡眠平均比常规护理多29分钟(95%置信区间(CI)18.53至39.73)。然而,在六周龄和十二周龄时,它对24小时内哭闹时间的平均差异没有显著影响。与婴儿行为相关的教育使母亲对婴儿行为的了解平均增加2.85分(95%CI 1.78至3.91)。
教育项目对参与者及其新生儿的益处仍不明确。与改善睡眠相关的教育似乎能增加婴儿睡眠,但对婴儿哭闹时间似乎没有影响。关于婴儿行为的教育可能会提高母亲的知识水平;然而,需要更多更大规模、设计良好的研究来证实这些发现。