Friday, February 28, 2020

St. Joseph Orange RNs publish new article

Congratulations to the following St. Joseph Orange RNs for their newly published article on postpartum father-infant massage: Carol Suchy, RN, MSN, IBCLC; Gloria Morgan, RN, MSN, RNC-LRN; Sue Duncan, RN, MSN, RNC-OB; Susan Villar, RN, MSN, RNC-OB; Frieda Fox, BA, IBCLC; Dana Rutledge, RN, PhD. PSJH caregivers have access to the full article through Burlew Medical Library. Contact library staff for more details.  


MCN Am J Matern Child Nurs. 2020 Feb 5. doi: 10.1097/NMC.0000000000000613.
Teaching Father-Infant Massage during Postpartum Hospitalization: A Randomized Crossover Trial.
Suchy C, Morgan G, Duncan S, Villar S, Fox F, Rutledge DN.

Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate acceptability and impact of infant massage video instruction on fathers' behaviors in early postpartum.
METHODS: A randomized crossover design was used. Participants were fathers of healthy term infants born at a Magnet hospital in Southern California. Measures included a demographic survey, Father-to-Infant Bonding Scale, Father-Infant Observation Scale, and postdischarge phone interview. Study nurses observed father-infant interactions for 5 minutes. Fathers were randomized to one of two groups: fathers in group 1 saw the massage video before they were observed with their infants and fathers in group 2 saw the video after. Fathers completed the Bonding Scale at baseline in person and again within a week of discharge by phone. Statistics were descriptive and comparative. Responses to interview questions were categorized and described.
RESULTS: Ninety-eight fathers aged 18 to 44 years participated. Over half of fathers identified as Hispanic and the majority spoke English at home. Most fathers had positive responses to infants on individual Bonding Scale items. Fathers differed significantly in observed interactions with infants depending upon timing of massage instruction; fathers observed immediately after the video had more total interactions, specifically fingertip touching. Poststudy evaluations were predominantly positive.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: We found a brief infant massage instruction offered by video was well accepted by fathers and increased observed father-infant interactions.

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