Schmitt Marin, Norr Kathleen F, White-Traut Rosemary, Brandon Debra, Gralton Karen, Gillette Patricia, Rigby-McCotter Christina, Kavanaugh Karen
Department of Nursing Research and Evidence-Based Practice (Drs Schmitt, Norr, White-Traut, and Gralton, Mss Gillette and Rigby-McCotter, and Dr Kavanaugh), Children's Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; College of Nursing (Drs Norr, White-Traut, and Kavanaugh), University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; and School of Nursing (Dr Brandon), School of Medicine (Dr Brandon), Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Adv Neonatal Care. 2025 Aug 1;25(4):401-410. doi: 10.1097/ANC.0000000000001282. Epub 2025 Jul 30.
Early parent involvement in an infant's neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) stay has positive benefits for the parent, the preterm infant, and the parent-infant relationship. H-HOPE (Hospital to Home: Optimizing the Preterm Infant's Environment) is an early behavioral intervention that provides an innovative developmental approach and contributes to parents' opportunity to provide care for their infant in the NICU.
To explore parents' experience with H-HOPE.
This qualitative study consists of one-on-one interviews with parents as part of a larger study investigating H-HOPE's implementation and effectiveness. Data from 38 parents encompassing 54 interviews are included in this analysis.
Parents report experiencing many benefits from participating in H-HOPE, including an increase in confidence, understanding of infant cues, promotion of bonding, infant benefits, and improvement in relationships with staff. Facilitators to participation include teaching and support in the NICU, being able to be present regularly, family support, and positive infant responses. Barriers to participating in the NICU were infant condition and readiness, family and economic limitations, lack of parent training or readiness, and nurse availability and communication. A lack of time and infant readiness were barriers at home.
Our findings highlight the importance of early behavioral interventions like H-HOPE that support parent-partnered care, which promotes parents' participation in their infants' care. NICU nurses play a critical role in facilitating parent participation and confidence. Future research should examine policies and programs to help enhance NICU nurses' readiness and ability to engage with and support parents.
父母早期参与婴儿的新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)住院治疗,对父母、早产儿以及亲子关系都有积极益处。H-HOPE(从医院到家:优化早产儿环境)是一种早期行为干预措施,它提供了一种创新的发育方法,并为父母在NICU照顾婴儿提供了机会。
探讨父母参与H-HOPE的体验。
这项定性研究包括与父母进行一对一访谈,这是一项更大规模研究的一部分,该研究旨在调查H-HOPE的实施情况和效果。本分析纳入了38位父母的54次访谈数据。
父母报告称,参与H-HOPE带来了许多益处,包括信心增强、对婴儿暗示的理解、促进亲子关系、对婴儿有益以及与医护人员关系的改善。参与的促进因素包括在NICU的教学和支持、能够定期在场、家庭支持以及婴儿的积极反应。在NICU参与的障碍包括婴儿状况和准备情况、家庭和经济限制、缺乏父母培训或准备以及护士的可及性和沟通。在家中的障碍是时间不足和婴儿准备情况。
我们的研究结果强调了像H-HOPE这样支持父母参与护理的早期行为干预措施的重要性,这促进了父母参与婴儿护理。NICU护士在促进父母参与和增强信心方面发挥着关键作用。未来的研究应审视相关政策和项目,以帮助提高NICU护士与父母互动和支持父母的准备情况和能力。