| Literature DB >> 35073953 |
Serena Salomè1, Giuseppina Mansi2, Carmine V Lambiase2, Marta Barone2, Valeria Piro2, Marcella Pesce3, Giovanni Sarnelli3, Francesco Raimondi2, Letizia Capasso2.
Abstract
BACKGORUND: Parents after Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) hospitalization of preterm infant may develop psychopathological symptoms. The aim of the study was to determine how parental stress and psychophysical wellbeing affect posttraumatic symptoms (PTTS) in parents during the first year after NICU discharge. Moreover, this study aimed to explore any gender-specific difference in psychological distress among mothers and fathers.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; NICU; PTSD; Parental stress; Preterm infants; Psychophysical wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35073953 PMCID: PMC8785440 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-022-01202-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Descriptive statistics for the final sample of infants and their parents
| Subjects: | Infants |
|---|---|
| Mean Birthweight | 1375 g (SD = 458.57; 760–2500 g) |
| Normal Birthweight | 1 (4.3%) |
| Low Birthweight | 5 (21.7%) |
| Very Low Birthweight | 13 (56.5%) |
| Extremely Low Birthweight | 4 (17.3%) |
| Gestational Age | 31 w (SD = 2.99; 25 to 36) |
| Late Preterm | 4 (17.3%) |
| Early Preterm | 14 (60.8%) |
| Extremely Low Gestational Age | 5 (21.7%) |
| Type of birth | |
| Natural | 5 (25%) |
| Caesarean section | 15 (75%) |
| Mean days spent in NICU | 59 (SD = 42.7; 17 to 199) |
| Days spent with invasive and not invasive respiratory support | 9 (SD = 17.3; 0 to 59) |
| Type of ventilation | |
| None | 8 (34.7%) |
| Not invasive | 7 (30.4%) |
| Invasive and not invasive | 8 (34.7%) |
| Sex | |
| M | 14 (70%) |
| F | 6 (30%) |
| Maternal age | 34 (SD = 6.6; 27 to 49) |
| Primary school graduation | 0 |
| Middle school graduation | 2 (10%) |
| High school diploma | 13 (65%) |
| University degree | 5 (25%) |
| Mean infant’s age at Time 1 | 19.8 days (SD = 7.5; 10 to 31) |
| Mean infant’s age at Time 2 | 7.55 months (SD = 2.39; 6 to 12) |
Fig. 1Comparison among maternal and paternal PSS:NICU scores comparison during hospitalization and at the follow-up visit. Wilcoxon paired test. **p < .01
Fig. 2Physical and Mental health in parents during NICU stay and at the follow-up visit. Wilcoxon paired test
Fig. 3Posttraumatic types of symptoms in mothers as compared to fathers. Wilcoxon paired test. *p < .05. **p < .01
Spearman correlations among NICU variables and maternal IES-R subscales
| Maternal Avoidance | Maternal Intrusion | Maternal Hyperarousal | Maternal Total score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sight & Sounds | .449* | .480* | .380 | .453* |
| Inf. Look & Behaviour | .681** | .543* | .464* | .674** |
| Parental role | .585** | .418 | .306 | .497* |
| PSS: NICU total score | .584** | .532* | .337 | .571** |
| Social activity | −.577** | −.600** | −.532* | −.658** |
| Role Emotional | −.442 | −.564** | −.619** | −.544* |
| MCS | −.436 | −.516* | −.592** | −.566** |
| Social activity | −.506* | −.453* | −.342 | −.439 |
| Mental Health | −.421 | −.616** | −.283 | −.408 |
| Vitality | −.403 | −.507* | −.312 | −.354 |
| MCS | −.359 | −.469* | −.191 | −.273 |
| SAS | .486* | .527* | .314 | .382 |
m = mother referred; f = father referred; *p < .05; **p < .01
Spearman correlations among NICU variables and paternal IES-R subscales
| ` | Paternal Avoidance | Paternal Intrusion | Paternal Hyperarousal | Paternal total score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sights & Sounds | .564** | .471* | .424 | .517* |
| Inf. Look & Behav. | .671** | .600** | .417 | .614** |
| Parental role | .638** | .476* | .384 | .565** |
| PSS: NICU | .756** | .625** | .574** | .745** |
| Sights & Sounds | .511* | .521* | .270 | .529* |
| PSS: NICU | .494* | .486* | .192 | .495* |
| Vitality | −.555* | −.661** | −.545* | −.654** |
| MCS | −.584** | −.724** | −.579** | −.733** |
| SAS | .449* | .322 | .267 | .413 |
| SDS | .705** | .676** | .572** | .766* |
m = mother referred; f = father referred; *p < .05; **p < .01