The effects of kangaroo care on delirium management in neonates under non-invasive mechanical ventilation: A randomized control trial
Metadatos
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Tehran University of Medical Sciences
Materia
Infant Delirium Mechanical ventilation Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) Kangaroo mother care method mechanical ventilation
Fecha
2025-01-08Referencia bibliográfica
Mirnia K, Osborne J.W, Sharif-Nia H, Sánchez-Teruel D, Khoshnavay Fomani F, Mirzaei N. The effects of kangaroo care on delirium management in neonates under non-invasive mechanical ventilation: A randomized control trial. Nursing Practice Today. 2025; 12(1):85-97. DOI: 10.18502/npt.v12i1.17528
Resumen
Background & Aims: Little is known about managing delirium in neonates admitted
to Neonatal Intensive Care Units. The current study investigated whether kangaroo
mother care can affect neonates' delirium under non-invasive mechanical ventilation.
Materials & Methods: In this randomized control trial, a total of 50 term neonates
who were under non-invasive mechanical ventilation were allocated to intervention
and control groups (n=25 in each group) using block randomization. Utilizing
“Cornell Assessment of Pediatric Delirium”, and “ACoRN respiratory sequence
protocol”, the data were gathered at baseline, 24, 48, and 72 hours after. The
intervention group received 30 minutes of kangaroo mother care daily.
Results: There was a statistical delirium mean scores difference between the two
groups on day 2 (p < 0.045) but not on other days. Repeated measures modeling (linear
mixed models and generalized linear mixed models) indicated significant differences
in change curves for both Cornell Assessment of Pediatric Delirium scores and the
incidence of delirium.
Conclusion: Implementing kangaroo mother care for a 30-minute duration each day
for neonates under non-invasive mechanical ventilation may markedly decrease
delirium occurrence.