Barlow Jane, Herath Nadeeja Ins, Bartram Torrance Christine, Bennett Cathy, Wei Yinghui
Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Barnett House, 32 Wellington Square, Oxford, UK, OX1 2ER.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Mar 14;3(3):CD011754. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011754.pub2.
The first three years of a child's life are a key period of physical, physiological, cognitive and social development, and the caregiver-infant relationship in early infancy plays an important role in influencing these aspects of development. Specifically, caregiver attunement facilitates the move from coregulation to self-regulation; a parent's ability to understand their infant's behaviour as communication is a key part of this process. Early, brief interventions such as the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS) or Neonatal Behavioral Observation (NBO) system are potential methods of improving outcomes for both infant and caregiver.
To assess the effects of the NBAS and NBO system for improving caregiver-infant interaction and related outcomes in caregivers and newborn babies. Secondary objectives were to determine whether the NBAS and NBO are more effective for particular groups of infants or parents, and to identify the factors associated with increased effectiveness (e.g. timing, duration, etc.).
In September 2017 we searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, 12 other databases and four trials registers. We also handsearched reference lists of included studies and relevant systematic reviews, and we contacted the Brazelton Institute and searched its websites to identify any ongoing and unpublished studies.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-RCTs that had used at least one standardised measure to assess the effects of the NBAS or NBO versus inactive control for improving outcomes for caregivers and their infants.
Two reviewer authors independently assessed the records retrieved from the search. One reviewer extracted data, and a second checked them for accuracy. We presented the results for each outcome in each study as standardised mean differences (SMDs) or as risk ratios (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). When appropriate, we combined the results in a meta-analysis using standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. We used the GRADE approach to assess the overall quality of the body of evidence for each outcome.
We identified and included 16 RCTs in this review: 13 assessing the NBAS and 3 the NBO for improving outcomes in 851 randomised participants, including parents and their premature or newborn (aged 4 to 12 weeks) infants. All studies took place in the USA, and we judged all of them to be at high risk of bias.Seven studies involving 304 participants contributed data to one meta-analysis of the impact of the NBAS or NBO for caregiver-infant interaction, and the results suggest a significant, medium-sized difference between intervention and control groups (SMD -0.53, 95% CI -0.90 to -0.17; very low-quality evidence), with moderate heterogeneity (I = 51%). Subgroup analysis comparing the two types of programmes (i.e. NBAS and NBO) found a medium but non-significant effect for the NBAS (-0.49, 95% CI -0.99 to 0.00, 5 studies), with high levels of heterogeneity (I = 61%), compared with a significant, large effect size for the NBO (-0.69, 95% CI -1.18 to -0.20, 2 studies), with no heterogeneity (I = 0.0%). A test for subgroup differences between the two models, however, was not significant. One study found a significant impact on the secondary outcome of caregiver knowledge (SMD -1.30, 95% CI -2.16 to -0.44; very low-quality evidence). There was no evidence of an impact on maternal depression. We did not identify any adverse effects.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is currently only very low-quality evidence for the effectiveness of the NBAS and NBO in terms of improving parent-infant interaction for mostly low-risk, first-time caregivers and their infants. Further research is underway regarding the effectiveness of the NBO and is necessary to corroborate these results.
儿童生命的前三年是身体、生理、认知和社会发展的关键时期,婴儿早期的照料者-婴儿关系在影响这些发展方面起着重要作用。具体而言,照料者的协调促进了从共同调节到自我调节的转变;父母将婴儿行为理解为交流的能力是这一过程的关键部分。早期的简短干预措施,如新生儿行为评估量表(NBAS)或新生儿行为观察(NBO)系统,是改善婴儿和照料者结局的潜在方法。
评估NBAS和NBO系统对改善照料者-婴儿互动以及照料者和新生儿相关结局的效果。次要目的是确定NBAS和NBO对特定婴儿或父母群体是否更有效,并确定与效果增强相关的因素(如时间、持续时间等)。
2017年9月,我们检索了CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase、PsycINFO、其他12个数据库和四个试验注册库。我们还手工检索了纳入研究和相关系统评价的参考文献列表,并联系了布雷泽尔顿研究所并搜索其网站,以识别任何正在进行和未发表的研究。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)和半随机对照试验,这些试验使用了至少一种标准化测量方法来评估NBAS或NBO与无活性对照相比,对改善照料者及其婴儿结局的效果。
两位综述作者独立评估从检索中获取的记录。一位综述作者提取数据,另一位检查数据的准确性。我们将每项研究中每个结局的结果表示为标准化均数差(SMD)或风险比(RR)以及95%置信区间(CI)。在适当情况下,我们使用Cochrane预期的标准方法程序在荟萃分析中合并结果。我们使用GRADE方法评估每个结局证据体的总体质量。
我们在本综述中识别并纳入了16项RCT:13项评估NBAS,3项评估NBO,以改善851名随机参与者(包括父母及其早产或新生儿(4至12周龄)婴儿)的结局。所有研究均在美国进行,我们判定所有研究都存在高偏倚风险。七项涉及304名参与者的研究为一项关于NBAS或NBO对照料者-婴儿互动影响的荟萃分析提供了数据,结果表明干预组和对照组之间存在显著的中等差异(SMD -0.53,95%CI -0.90至-0.17;极低质量证据),异质性中等(I² = 51%)。比较两种类型项目(即NBAS和NBO)的亚组分析发现,NBAS有中等但不显著的效果(-0.49,95%CI -0.99至0.00,5项研究),异质性较高(I² = 61%),而NBO有显著的大效应量(-0.69,95%CI -1.18至-0.20,2项研究),无异质性(I² = 0.0%)。然而,两种模型之间亚组差异的检验不显著。一项研究发现对照料者知识的次要结局有显著影响(SMD -1.30,95%CI -2.16至-0.44;极低质量证据)。没有证据表明对产妇抑郁有影响。我们未发现任何不良反应。
目前仅有极低质量证据表明NBAS和NBO在改善大多为低风险的首次照料者及其婴儿的亲子互动方面有效。关于NBO有效性的进一步研究正在进行,有必要证实这些结果。