Acta paediatrica
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Comparative Study
"Minitouch" treatment of very low-birth-weight infants.
In a cohort study with historical controls of non-asphyxiated very low-birth-weight infants (birth weight < or = 1500 g and gestational age < 33 completed weeks), we evaluated the use of a "minitouch" regime for stabilization after birth and treatment of respiratory distress. This combination of early (prophylactic) treatment with nasal continuous positive airway pressure and minimal handling was introduced as a routine in our Department in 1986. We compared infants born in 1987 and in 1985, when ventilator treatment was used initially in all infants with progressing respiratory distress. ⋯ Septicaemia was diagnosed in 16% of the infants in 1987 versus 7% in 1985 (p = 0.045). This difference coincided with an increased use of total parenteral nutrition (18% in 1987 versus 3% in 1985, p = 0.007). We conclude that the minitouch regime prevents progression of respiratory distress, reduces the need for ventilator treatment and is a safe and convenient alternative to mechanical ventilation in preterm infants with mild respiratory problems.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Mothers' perceptions of their preterm infants treated in an incubator or on a heated water-filled mattress: a pilot study.
Ten Swedish and 23 Turkish mothers delivering premature infants with a birth weight of less than 2000 g were investigated concerning their attitudes and feelings towards their newborn babies when the infants were treated either in an air-heated incubator or on a heated water-filled mattress (HWM). The first interview took place during the first few days after delivery and the second interview in the case of the Swedish study two weeks later and in the Turkish study one week later. ⋯ These feelings had changed strikingly by the time of the second interview among the mothers whose infants were treated on the HWM, but persisted to a large extent among the mothers whose infants remained in an incubator. The results of both investigations indicate that the mothers' perceptions of their infants improves when the prematurely born infant is treated on an HWM instead of in an incubator.