Premature Birth Clinical Trial
Official title:
Emotional Reactions of Mothers Facing Premature Births
Our intervention in the maternity and neonatal wards helped our sensibility to the immediate
parental reaction to the premature birth. Among these reactions, what is called "stress" by
the parents occurs most often and is at the origin of trauma. The investigators can cite the
unexpected confrontation with a baby is far from corresponding to what the parents had
anticipated; the stunned feeling while experiencing a chain of events rapidly taking place,
an experience of emptiness when the baby is placed in the intensive care unit, the feeling of
powerlessness when facing the real risk of the infant's death, the striking spectacle of
invasive treatments, etc. The parents worry about the viability and future of their premature
infant. Their parental impressions and more specifically those of the mother facing the
premature birth could in and of themselves have repercussions on the development of the
infant, by betting on a complex meeting and atypical interactions.
These observations have driven us to elaborate on a hypothesis that finds itself separate
from the lesion model commonly applied to premature infants, and shifts the
psychopathological approach to the post-traumatic reaction of the mother following the
premature birth and repositions the question of behavioral disorders of the child in the
interaction mother-infant field. The investigators think that the premature birth can bring
about in a second phase and notably in the mother, post-traumatic symptoms as described in
the post-traumatic stress state, and that this reaction could have effects on the
mother-infant interactions. The investigators have carried out the current study to clarify
the relationship between the mother's post-traumatic reaction triggered by the premature
birth and the mother-infant interactions.
2.1 Design A multicenter prospective study was performed in three French hospitals (Reims,
Nancy and Besançon) between January 2008 and January 2011. The follow-up period was 18 months
for each dyad.
2.2 Population
In practice, our study will be carried out in five sessions and at three visits:
The first visit in maternity service, following the birth of the child, the second visit, in
the neonatology service, right before the discharge. The third time will be repeated at 6, 12
and 18 months, within the framework of the systematic tracking of premature babies within the
early medico-social actions' center (CAMSP).
2.3 Data collection 2.3.1 Sociodemographic and clinical data Sociodemographic variables
recorded during the study were age, marital status, level of education and profession.
For the mothers, clinical data were: number of childbirths, number of pregnancies, medical
history of the pregnancy (threatened premature labor, hospitalization,...), obstetric history
(miscarriage, medical interruption of pregnancy, termination of pregnancy, in vitro
fertilization, threatened premature labor, prematurity, hospitalizations,…), delivery
conditions (C-section or vaginal), multiple pregnancy (number of babies), anesthesia type
(none, epidural, total), personal histories (medical, surgical, psychiatric, family).
For the infants, clinical data were: date of birth, term of birth, weight, size, cranial
perimeter, Apgar score at five and ten minutes, necessity or not of a neonatal resuscitation,
method of feeding (breast-, bottle-, mixed-feeding).
For the dyads, clinical data were the presence or absence of a specific coping (psychologist,
psychomotor therapist, …).
2.3.2 Evaluation scales 2.3.2.1 For the mother Evaluation of trauma of the mother using "
Perinatal Posttraumatic Stress Disorder " or PPQ.
It consists of a self--questionnaire made up of 14 items, specially adapted to the parents of
perinatal high-risk children, in order to evaluate the presence of traumatic elements
concerning the birth.
In order to neutralize identified biases, the investigators also evaluate the maternal co
morbidity while using:
The HADS scale (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) which is a self-questionnaire
frequently used in international literature. Fast and easy to use, it makes it possible to
evaluate anxious and depressive symptomatology of the people having somatic diseases. It
makes it possible to evaluate the episodes of recent anxiety and depression and to attribute
an overall score to each one. The result is expressed in a score.
The EPDS scale (Edinburgh Post-natal Depression Scale) consists of a self-questionnaire that
tracks postnatal depression and includes 10 items, which the investigators offer to the
mother as of the 4th week of postpartum.
The maternal social support self-evaluation by the Support Social Questionnaire (SSQ) of
Sarason, proposes the measure of the number of people available and the perceived quality of
this support, using 6 items.
2.3.2.2 For the child The investigators evaluate the perinatal risk of the infant with the
scale Perinatal Risk Inventory (PRI). This scale uses 18 items to describe the gravity of the
perinatal problems and the severity of the perinatal risk while being based on perinatal
factors such as the Apgar score, the gestational age, the weight or the cranial perimeter.
The developmental evaluation of the child is done using DDST, Denver Developmental Screening
Test. This assessment makes it possible to evaluate the level of the child between 0 to 6
years of age in the various fields of the development (global motricity, language, fine
motricity, social contact).
The perceived temperament of the child is evaluated by the self-questionnaire filled out by
the mother on the temperament of her infant QT6, translation of Bates' "Infant
Characteristics Questionnaire". The mother ranks each item indicating the level of perceived
difficulty in dealing with the described behavior. Four subscales have been identified
through principal components analyses: Fussy/Difficult, Unadaptable, Dull, and Unpredictable.
2.3.2.3 For the interactions in the dyad Censullo's DMC (Dyadic Mutuality Code) Scale can be
used for the first 6 months of the baby's life. After a 5-minute observation of the dyad
interacting the observer codes 6 items (mutual attention, positive affect, reciprocity,
maternal pauses, clearness of the signals of the baby, receptivity/maternal sensitivity). The
score makes it possible to define a low or high interactional synchrony.
Fiese's PIPE (Pediatric Infant Parent Exam) can be used from 0 to 18 months. The mother is
invited to play for a short time, games like "peek-a-boo" with her baby. The observer of the
interaction grants a grade to the degree of interactional reciprocity and positive affects at
the beginning, during and at the end of the play.
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