Hill Morgan E, Martin Ashley, DeMauro Sara B
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics (ME Hill, A Martin, SB DeMauro), Children's Hospital of Philadelphia - Roberts Center for Pediatric Research, Philadelphia, PA.
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics (ME Hill, A Martin, SB DeMauro), Children's Hospital of Philadelphia - Roberts Center for Pediatric Research, Philadelphia, PA; Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics (SB DeMauro), University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine.
Acad Pediatr. 2023 Jan-Feb;23(1):148-154. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2022.08.008. Epub 2022 Aug 30.
To describe parent-reported barriers and facilitators to reading to preterm-born infants, both in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and at home. We hypothesized that families of preterm infants face unique barriers previously not described in the literature, and that understanding barriers from the parent perspective will uncover strategies for improving the NICU environment and cognitive home environment and allow refinement of current reading programs.
We performed a qualitative study of parents of 0 to 12 month corrected age infants presenting to neonatal follow-up clinic. Infants were born <33 weeks gestational age or with birth weight ≤1500 grams. Parents completed a semistructured interview about reading practices. Answers to open-ended questions were coded to highlight key themes.
We reached thematic saturation after interviewing 23 parents of 28 infants. Parent-generated items about barriers and facilitators to reading in the NICU and at home were each coded into 4 themes. Competing responsibilities and believing that reading was developmentally inappropriate were 2 shared themes for barriers to reading in both the NICU and home environment. Support people and understanding developmental impact were 2 shared themes for facilitators to reading in both the NICU and home environment.
This qualitative work elucidates new targets for novel programs intended to support cognitive development of high-risk preterm infants. Addressing the unique, parent-reported barriers that we have identified and supporting adoption of the facilitators could increase word exposure for preterm infants, starting in the NICU and continuing at home.
描述家长报告的在新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)和家中给早产婴儿读书的障碍和促进因素。我们假设早产婴儿的家庭面临文献中未曾描述过的独特障碍,并且从家长角度了解这些障碍将揭示改善NICU环境和家庭认知环境的策略,并使当前的阅读计划得以完善。
我们对到新生儿随访门诊就诊的矫正年龄为0至12个月的婴儿的家长进行了一项定性研究。婴儿的胎龄小于33周或出生体重≤1500克。家长完成了关于阅读习惯的半结构化访谈。对开放式问题的回答进行编码以突出关键主题。
在采访了28名婴儿的23位家长后,我们达到了主题饱和。家长提出的关于在NICU和家中阅读的障碍和促进因素的项目分别被编码为4个主题。相互竞争的责任以及认为阅读在发育上不合适是NICU和家庭环境中阅读障碍的两个共同主题。支持人员和理解发育影响是NICU和家庭环境中阅读促进因素的两个共同主题。
这项定性研究阐明了旨在支持高危早产婴儿认知发展的新计划的新目标。解决我们所确定的独特的、家长报告的障碍,并支持采用促进因素,可以增加早产婴儿的词汇接触量,从NICU开始并持续到家中。