Perinatal Institute, Division of Neonatology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH; Division of Neonatology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL.
Perinatal Institute, Division of Neonatology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH.
J Pediatr. 2021 May;232:95-102. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2021.01.003. Epub 2021 Jan 13.
To assess whether a citywide structured book-sharing program (NICU Bookworms) designed to promote reading to infants while admitted in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) would increase parental reading behaviors (≥3-4 days/week) in the NICU and after discharge home, including high-risk parents who do not themselves enjoy reading.
The NICU Bookworms program comprised staff training, parent education, and building a literacy-rich environment. In this quasi-experimental intervention study, parents of medically high-risk NICU graduates <6 months of age were administered a questionnaire at their first NICU follow-up clinic visit. The survey incorporated questions from the StimQ-I READ subscale to assess home reading environment and shared reading practices.
A total of 317 infants were enrolled, 187 in an unexposed comparison group and 130 in the intervention group. Parents exposed to Bookworms were significantly more likely to read ≥3-4 days per week while in the NICU (34.5% vs 51.5%; P = .002; aOR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.2-4.0), but reading at home did not differ (67.9% vs 73.1%; P = .28; aOR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.5-1.8). However, among parents who did not themselves enjoy reading, frequency was significantly higher both in the NICU (18.4% vs 46.1%; P = .009; aOR, 5.0; 95% CI, 1.2-21.5) and at home (36.9% vs 70%; P = .003; aOR, 3.7; 95% CI, 1.1-12.9). A qualitative thematic analysis found that Bookworms decreased parental stress, enhanced bonding, and supported positive parent-infant interactions.
A book-sharing intervention in the NICU increased parent-reported reading aloud during hospitalization and among parents disinclined to read for pleasure, both in the NICU and following discharge. This change may have been mediated by enhancement of parent-infant interactions.
评估一项旨在促进新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)内婴儿阅读的全市范围结构化图书共享计划(NICU 书虫)是否会增加父母在 NICU 内和出院回家后的阅读行为(每周≥3-4 天),包括不喜欢阅读的高危父母。
NICU 书虫计划包括员工培训、家长教育和营造丰富的读写环境。在这项准实验性干预研究中,对年龄<6 个月的有医疗风险的 NICU 毕业生的父母在他们的第一次 NICU 随访诊所就诊时进行了问卷调查。该调查采用了 StimQ-I READ 子量表中的问题来评估家庭阅读环境和共享阅读实践。
共有 317 名婴儿入组,187 名婴儿为未暴露于对照组,130 名婴儿为干预组。暴露于书虫计划的父母在 NICU 内每周阅读≥3-4 天的可能性明显更高(34.5% vs 51.5%;P=0.002;aOR,2.2;95%CI,1.2-4.0),但在家阅读没有差异(67.9% vs 73.1%;P=0.28;aOR,0.99;95%CI,0.5-1.8)。然而,在不喜欢阅读的父母中,NICU 内的频率明显更高(18.4% vs 46.1%;P=0.009;aOR,5.0;95%CI,1.2-21.5),在家中的频率也明显更高(36.9% vs 70%;P=0.003;aOR,3.7;95%CI,1.1-12.9)。定性主题分析发现,书虫计划减少了父母的压力,增强了亲子关系,并支持了积极的母婴互动。
NICU 中的图书共享干预措施增加了父母报告的住院期间和出院后不喜欢阅读的父母的朗读次数,无论是在 NICU 内还是出院后。这种变化可能是通过增强母婴互动来介导的。