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Early Skin-to-skin Contact clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05655104 Not yet recruiting - Parenting Clinical Trials

Effects of the Couplet Care in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Start date: January 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a quasi-experimental before and after intervention study taking place in the level III NICU of Turku University Hospital in Finland to evaluate the effects of the Couplet Care, a care model which provides maternal and infant care in the same room even when intensive care of the infant is needed. The investigators will prospectively collect data after starting Couplet Care. The pre-intervention data was already collected during 2018 and 2019 as a part of the 2nd International Closeness Survey.

NCT ID: NCT01894880 Completed - Clinical trials for Early Skin-to-skin Contact

Pilot Study: Sectio Bonding/Early Skin-to-skin Contact (SSC) After Caesarean Section

SSC
Start date: July 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In the past decades frequency of cesarean section was increasing. Bonding or early skin-to-skin contact (SSC) starts ideally straight after birth. After vaginal delivery bonding/early SSC is already well-established. After cesarean section this important process starts after termination of operation. A Cochran review analyzed randomized studies and shows positive effects of early SSC. Possible concerns to adopt bonding in the operating room are beside organizational ones (change of established processes) also a different ambiance in the operating room (temperature, light, noise). In a prospective randomized trial, early SSC after cesarean section should be analyzed. Hypothesis Mothers, who have the chance to bond immediately after birth in the operating room, have lower cortisol, chromogranin A and alpha amylase levels as well as higher oxytocin levels. Adaptation of the newborn is within the normal range. Early bonding has a further positive effect on breast feeding, maternal pain processing and mental health.