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A low-cost intervention to promote immediate skin-to-skin contact and improve temperature regulation in Northern Uganda
Author(s) -
Eva Nissen,
Kristin Svensson,
Scovia Nalugo Mbalinda,
Kajsa Brimdyr,
Peter Waiswa,
Beatrice Mpora Odongkara,
Anna Hjelmstedt
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
african journal of midwifery and women s health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2052-4293
pISSN - 1759-7374
DOI - 10.12968/ajmw.2018.0037
Subject(s) - skin to skin , medicine , intervention (counseling) , skin temperature , dermatology , skin reaction , skin repair , pediatrics , surgery , nursing , wound healing , breastfeeding
Background Uninterrupted skin-to-skin contact between mothers and newborns during the first hour after birth has been reported to be 2% in Uganda.Aims To investigate if a low-cost intervention targeting the behaviors of hospital staff would increase skin-to-skin contact and to investigate whether skin-to-skin contact stabilised temperature in the newborn.Methods The study had a quasi-experimental, before and after design. The sample included 110 in the pre-intervention group, and 93 in the post-intervention group. Data collection included observations of skin-to-skin contact and temperature measurements. Data were also collected from medical records and interviews.Findings No infants had skin-to-skin contact before the intervention, whereas the proportion was 54.8% after the intervention. Infants who received skin-to-skin contact (n=51) and infants who did not receive skin-to-skin contact (n=146) increased in temperature; however, infants who received skin-to-skin contact were significantly warmer after 5 minutes and remained so at 60 minutes.Conclusions The intervention increased the practice of skin-to-skin contact, which was found to be safe in regard to temperature stabilisation.

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