Brimdyr Kajsa, Mbalinda Scovia Nalugo, Blair Anna, Svensson Kristin, Kagawa Mike, Reyes Melissa, Bastarache Louise Racine, Kamoga Livingstone, Kigozi Edwin, Cadwell Karin
Healthy Children Project Inc, 159 Long Pond Drive, Harwich, MA, 02645, USA.
College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Sci Rep. 2024 Dec 30;14(1):32042. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-83761-1.
Skin-to-skin contact between the mother and baby during the first hour after birth has significant benefits for mother, newborn and breastfeeding. However, optimal implementation is highly variable. The 2023 International Guidelines on skin-to-skin contact in the first hour after birth place high confidence in the evidence that immediate, continuous, uninterrupted skin-to-skin contact should be routine for all mothers and all babies over 1000 g, regardless of mode of delivery. The PRECESS (Practice Reflection Education and Training Combined with Ethnography for Sustainable Success) methodology provides evidence-based education, process-oriented practice, experiential learning and Interactive Analysis Labs to achieve sustainable best practice. This study aimed to determine if, using PRECESS methodology, the 2023 guideline could be fully implemented and sustained in a regional teaching and referral hospital in Uganda, and whether this resulted in an increase of breastfeeding initiation in the first hour after birth. PRECESS is a prospective cohort study methodology. Baseline data on a convenience sample of 92 dyads was collected, and video recordings made, of each newborn during the first hour after birth. Then, intervention began with an evidence-based lecture for health care workers describing the optimal practice of skin-to-skin contact and first-hour newborn behaviors. Practice experience followed the lecture with all of the health care workers as they came on shift for 105 dyads, who were also video recorded for the first hour. Interactive Analysis Labs allowed key informants to provide reflection on barriers and solutions. Approximately 6 weeks after the initial intervention, 128 dyads were observed and video recorded to determine sustainability of the procedure. Implementation of skin-to-skin contact in the first hour after birth using PRECESS resulted in significantly more time in skin-to-skin contact than pre-intervention (2 m 25 s + - 2 m 48 s vs. 57 m 51 s + -2 m 53 s p < 0.001), although breastfeeding rates in the first hour after birth were not significantly different (29% in baseline, 28% after intervention, p = 0.871). After 6 weeks, skin-to-skin contact in the first hour after birth remained high, at 58 m 17 s + - 2 m 02 s. Breastfeeding in the first hour after birth increased to 44% (p = 0.012). PRECESS provided a fast-track methodology for improving skin-to-skin contact and breastfeeding in the first hour after birth in a regional teaching and referral hospital in Uganda.
出生后第一小时内母婴之间的皮肤接触对母亲、新生儿和母乳喂养都有显著益处。然而,最佳实施情况差异很大。《2023年出生后第一小时皮肤接触国际指南》对以下证据充满信心:对于所有母亲和体重超过1000克的所有婴儿,无论分娩方式如何,立即、持续、不间断的皮肤接触都应成为常规做法。PRECESS(实践反思教育与培训结合人种志以实现可持续成功)方法提供基于证据的教育、以过程为导向的实践、体验式学习和互动分析实验室,以实现可持续的最佳实践。本研究旨在确定使用PRECESS方法,《2023年指南》能否在乌干达的一家地区教学和转诊医院得到全面实施和维持,以及这是否会导致出生后第一小时内母乳喂养开始率的提高。PRECESS是一种前瞻性队列研究方法。收集了92对母婴的便利样本的基线数据,并在出生后第一小时对每个新生儿进行了录像。然后,干预开始,为医护人员举办了一场基于证据的讲座,描述皮肤接触的最佳做法和出生后第一小时新生儿的行为。讲座之后,所有医护人员在轮班期间对105对母婴进行实践体验,这些母婴在第一小时也进行了录像。互动分析实验室让关键信息提供者对障碍和解决方案进行反思。在最初干预约6周后,观察并录制了128对母婴的情况,以确定该程序的可持续性。使用PRECESS在出生后第一小时实施皮肤接触,与干预前相比,皮肤接触的时间显著增加(2分25秒±2分48秒对57分51秒±2分53秒,p<0.001),尽管出生后第一小时的母乳喂养率没有显著差异(基线时为29%,干预后为28%,p=0.871)。6周后,出生后第一小时的皮肤接触率仍然很高,为58分17秒±2分02秒。出生后第一小时的母乳喂养率提高到44%(p=0.012)。PRECESS为改善乌干达一家地区教学和转诊医院出生后第一小时内皮肤接触和母乳喂养提供了一种快速方法。