| Literature DB >> 31375123 |
Michelangelo Barbaglia1, Enrico Finale2,3, Silvia Noce4, Alessandro Vigo4, Cesare Arioni5, Raffaella Visentin1, Elisabetta Scurati-Manzoni1, Andrea Guala1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sudden unexpected postnatal collapse of presumably healthy neonates during early skin-to-skin contact is a rare, yet recognized occurrence, associated with a high risk of mortality and morbidity. A survey was conducted in 2012 in 30 delivery wards throughout Piedmont and the Aosta Valley to evaluate the environmental and logistical aspects that could be linked to SUPC. The survey was again conducted in 2016 in 28 delivery wards in Piedmont and the Aosta Valley in order to evaluate organizational improvements introduced after ministerial indications and recommendations by the Italian Society of Neonatology were published in 2014, in light of new findings regarding the phenomenon.Entities:
Keywords: Breast feeding; Delivery room practices; Neonatal collapse; SUPC; Skin to skin
Year: 2019 PMID: 31375123 PMCID: PMC6679473 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-019-0688-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Early skin-to-skin contact: practice, timing and duration
| Question | 2012 | 2016 | Odds ratio | x2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| STSa in the delivery room is routinely offered | 1.037 (0.4859–2.214) | |||
| STS in the operating room is routinely offered | 1.077 (0.3995–2.903) | |||
| If the mother gives birth under sedation, STS is offered) | 1.167 (0.4517–3.013) | |||
| Within how many minutes STS begins? (0–5 minuti) | 1.167 (0.5403–2.416) | |||
| How long does the STS (lasts the time that the mother wants) | 0.8974 (0.3765–2.139) | |||
| 0.8615 (0.2085–3.56) | ||||
| 1.077 (0.1413–8.21) | ||||
| What position does the mother take during STS (as comfortable as possible) | 0.5799 (0.2004–0.5799) | |||
| What position does the newborn take during STS (prone between the mother’s breasts) | 0.8974 (0.404–1.994) | |||
| The cover of the newborn allows to view the face and the head | 1.037 (0.4859–2.214) | |||
| There are no trusted persons of the woman (father or others) during the skin to skin | 0.4368 (0.0768–2.416) |
aSTS = Skin to skin
Organization of medical and nursing staff in the delivery wards
| 2012 | 2016 | Odds ratio (95% CI) | x2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parents receive information on STSa | 1.077 (0.4947–2344) | |||
| Parents are instructed to check the vital signs (color and breathing) | 2.046(0.8046–5.203) | |||
| Within what the routine newborn care is performed | 0.9423 (0.2995–2965) | |||
| 0.6282 (0.2146–1.839) | ||||
| 2.154 (0.3635–12.76) | ||||
| 0.7179(0.111–4.644) | ||||
| / | / | |||
| / | / | |||
| 6.462 (0.7281–57.34) | ||||
| The medical staff is present | 1.149 (0.4747–2.78) | |||
| 0.8284 (0.3103–2.212) | ||||
| The monitoring of vital signs by the staff every time it is done? 5–30 min | 1.212 (0.513–2.861) | |||
| Is it reported in the medical chart? Yes | 1.556 (0.5702–4.856) |
aSTS skin to skin
Set-up of delivery and post-partum room
| 2012 | 2016 | Odds ratio | x2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Telephone as an emergency call tool | 1.12 (0.5208–2.583) | |||
| The light allows to detect the vital signs | 1.436 (0–6099-3.38) | |||
| Written procedure for skin to skin | 0.8974 (0.332–2.426) |
Raccomendations and preventive measures for safe postpartum mother-child skin-to-skin contact
| Furnish a written protocol regarding assistance, observation/supervision and of parent instruction | |
| Maintain sufficient lighting for the correct observation of the newborn | |
| Never leave the mother alone, always ensure the presence of the hospital staff, relatives or a trusted person (sensitized prior to delivery) | |
| Favor optimal 45° sitting position of the mother (biological nurturing): this guarantees the use of active neonatal reflexes that promote breastfeeding, neonatal respiration, and greater interaction in the mother-infand dyad, including eye contact | |
| Ensure that infant’s mouth and nose are always visible | |
| Ensure continuous supervision by staff during skin-to-skin contact in cases of maternal sedation, fatigue or primiparity | |
| Avoid use of mobile phones and other distractions in the room | |
| Use pulse oximetry monitoring in highly selected situations |
Adapted from Davanzo R, et al.; Making the first days of life safer: preventing sudden unexpected postnatal collapse while promoting breastfeeding. J Hum Lact 2015 31: 47–52 [9]