Infant, Premature Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Impact of Implementing the Newborn Individualized Developmental Care and Assessment Program on Neurobehavioral Organization of Preterm Infants in the NICU
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of the NIDCAP program of individualized patient consultation on the neurobehavioral organization of transported preterm infants in the NICU. Behavioral response to routine caregiving will be compared between infants in the pre-NIDCAP group to infants in the post-NIDCAP group. And it is this behavioral response that will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of the NIDCAP program.
Therapies that have brought about sharp decreases in neonatal mortality have not brought
about similar decreases in neurodevelopmental morbidity for preterm infants. Developmentally
supportive care is NICU care that seeks to optimize the developmental course and outcomes
for preterm infants. While other staff training programs for developmentally supportive care
exist, it is the Newborn Developmental Care and Assessment Program (NIDCAP) that has been
the methodology used in randomly controlled trials that demonstrate positive medical and
neurobehavioral outcomes for preterm infants receiving developmentally supportive care.
NICUs that care for all out-born or transported infants face unique challenges in balancing
developmentally supportive nursing care with the high-technological medical needs of the
most critically ill and extremely premature infants. Yet it is these most fragile infants
who can most benefit from the positive impact the NIDCAP program can offer. Yet, there are
no published studies documenting the impact of the NIDCAP program on neurobehavioral
outcomes of these transported preterm infants exclusively.
Objectives: The objective of this project is to study the impact of implementing the NIDCAP
program of individualized patient consultation on the neurobehavioral organization of
transported preterm infants in the NICU of a major pediatric medical center.
Research Methods: A random sample of approximately 40 preterm infants will be recruited to
participate in this descriptive study. In this phase-lag design, 20 infants will participate
in the pre-NIDCAP intervention phase and 20 infants will participate in the post-NIDCAP
intervention phase. Each infant within each phase will be videotaped during 2 routine
nurse-caregiving sessions. The first session will occur within 72 hours of admission to the
NICU at Children's Memorial Hospital (CMH). The second session will occur when the infant is
34-36 weeks corrected gestational age. The videotapes will be collected so that observations
of the infant's physical environment and caregiving and an assessment of the infant's
behavioral function can be scored randomly at the end of the study by an outside consultant
without bias as to what phase the infant participated. In addition, demographic data will be
collected on the sample infants. Data will be subjected to descriptive statistics,
inferential statistics and correlational procedures.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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