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Family Centered Care clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04761419 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Family Centered Care

Family Centered Care Cohort Study 1 in Nagano Children's Hospital

Start date: February 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

An observational cohort study to show the effect of parents' presence beside their infants, skin-to-skin contact (SCC), participation in infant care, or any interaction with their infants on parents' and infants' short- and long-term outcomes. Investigators create a hypothesis that longer parents' presence, SCC, participation in infant care, and any interaction with their infants affect outcomes of infants and parents by preventing parents' depression and promoting parent-infant bonding and, in addition, by shortening the length of stay, promoting growth, promoting establishment breastfeeding, and improving developmental outcomes. Parents are asked to make a record of the length of their presence, SCC, participation in infant care, and any interaction with their infants, which are quantitative measurements of family centered care (FCC). Investigators also collect the data related to the background information of the family, delivery, the clinical course of infants, and the outcome measures of the infants and parents. No intervention is included in this research. The study setting is a level IV neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at Nagano Children's Hospital in Nagano, Japan. Eligible infants are those who are born at 34 weeks of gestation or earlier from Japanese parents in Nagano Children's Hospital and need admission into NICU in the same hospital. Infants are excluded from this study if they have any major anomalies including suspicion of chromosomal disorder on admission, if at least one parent is Not Japanese, or if they do not survive until discharge home. The primary outcomes are the EPDS and Japanese version of Mother-to-Infant Bonding Scale (MIBS-J) of the parents. The secondary outcomes are the followings; (1) length of stay (days), (2) physical measurements at 36 weeks (g or cm) and growth rate from birth to discharge home (g or cm /d), (3) breastmilk-feeding (exclusive, partial, or no breast milk) and the frequency of breastfeeding directly from breast at 36 weeks PMA and at discharge (average frequency per day), and for the infants whose birth weight <1500g only, (4) developmental quotient (DQ) at 6 and 18 months of corrected age, and 3 years old assessed by Kyoto Scale of Psychological Development (KSPD).

NCT ID: NCT04378673 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Family Centered Care

The Effect of Parental Presence on Pain and Anxiety Levels During Peripheral Intravenous Catheterization in Infants

Start date: March 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Children's changing emotional and physical needs, continuous, comprehensive, accessible, coordinated and family requires a centered care.Parental presence during invasive procedures is important in family-centered-care. Family-centered-care is a basic principle of pediatric nursing. It is extremely important that parents are with their children during painful procedures. Research; parents during peripheral intravenous catheterization in infancy It was planned to determine the effect of inclusion on pain and anxiety.