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Discover strategies to support premature infants and their families transitioning from hospital to home. Learn about the needs of premature infants and families, common feeding and sleep concerns, social interaction challenges, and motor development tips.
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Supporting Premature Infants and their Families Transition from Hospital to Home Cindy Redd, M.Ed Ann Marie Elmore, P.T
What is a transition? • Passage: the act of passing from one state or place to the next • Conversion: an event that results in a transformation • Change from one place or state or subject or stage to another • Cause to convert or undergo a transition wordnet.princeton.edu
“Transitionsare Tricky” • Needs, priorities, concerns, strengths, resources etc. are changing • Strategies for support and intervention must be assessed and adjusted frequently • Stress and anxiety may increase due to change even when change is positive. • Beginning and end of transition can be unclear.
“Tricks” for Supporting Transitions • View transition as “bridge” from one place/state to the next. • Reflect and recognize progress and movement • Celebrate the baby steps of progress • Expect and support grief for what’s left behind
Supporting Transition from Hospital to Home • Needs of Premature Infants • Needs of Families • Services Needed
Needs of Premature Infants • Feeding • Sleep • Self-Regulation • Social Interactions • Motor Development • Infection Control
Feeding • Taking everything by mouth (full po feeds) is a newly acquired skill, two or three days, therefore feeding is not well established and can be stressful for parents
Common Feeding Concerns • Chokes • Wants to Eat all the Time • Takes a Long Time to Eat • Sucks Frantically • Frequently Spits Up
Chokes When Feeding • Difficulty coordinating suck, swallow, breathing. • Slow flow nipple • Side lying to feed • Assist baby with pacing and timing by tilting the bottle
Wants To Eat All The Time • Babies sucking to feed and to self-regulate
Common Sleep Concerns • Only sleeps if being held • Sleeps all day, stays awake during the night • Catnaps throughout the day • Does not sleep thought the night when it’s age appropriate.
Sleeps Only When Held • Holding provides the supports babies need to sleep • containment • incline • ventral support • warmth • Mother’s body is “home” to baby • Rhythms of breathing & heart beat familiar • Mother’s smell is comforting
Sleeps all Day, Awake at Night • It’s easier for premature baby to be awake when it is dark and quiet. • The “stress” of daytime activities can cause premature baby to “shut down.” • Strategies should support baby’s efforts to stay awake or asleep at the appropriate times.
Activities to Support Sleep • Place light and/or radio near the baby’s bassinet at night • Avoid social interactions and “invitation to play”
Activities to Support Alertness • Dark quiet environment is optimal environment for being awake/alert • Even dim natural light and buffered sounds can cause stress reaction. • Dim lights and close blinds, especially those in baby’s face • Minimize noise and social activity • Communicate “invitation to play” when baby wakes up during the day
Social Interaction & Self-Regulation Concerns • “My baby does no want to look at me” • Fussy • Maybe self-regulation or reflux related
Self-Regulation Concerns • Baby does not want to look at parents • Fussiness
Activities to Support Social Interaction • Decrease environmental stimulation • Read and respond to subtilities of infant cues
Activities to Decrease Irritability • Dispel myth – “baby just wants to be held” • Support infant’s effort to self-regulate • Suck • Hands together • Hands to mouth • Feet together • Give infant time to respond to support • Avoid constant repositioning • Vestibular Movement with containment
Activities to Decrease Irritability • Decrease stimulation • Understand how different environments and fatigue effects self-regulation
Motor • Premature infants have strong extensor muscles • If extension activities are encouraged then baby will develop extensor dominance • Encourage flexion
Extensor Dominance Influences • Hyper-extended Neck • Retracted Shoulders • Decreased Trunk/Pelvic Mobility • Frog Legged • Toe Walking
Activities to Prevent or Decrease Extensor Dominance Facilitate • Flexion • Trunk/Pelvic Mobility • Weight Shifting
Carrying • Shoulders Forward • Hips Tucked and Together
Awake Stomach Time • Activates Neck Flexors • Facilitates Shoulder Forward
Trunk &Pelvic Mobility • Hand to Feet Play • Pivoting on Stomach
Limit Leg Extension Activities • Lap Standing • Exersaucers • Johnny Jump Ups • Be sure heel cords are not tight
Plageocephaly • With “back to sleep” infants spend more time on their backs, in infant carriers, car seats & swings and much less awake/play tummy time • Prior to 2 months (corrected age), babies will turn their head to the side when lying on their back • 85% of newborns have right head preference
Baby’s heads are very moldable • Increase in abnormal head shapes
What To Do • Monitor head position • Alter sleep, carrying, and play positions • Head in midline in carriers, car seats, swings • Range of motion exercises- preferably active • Increase awake stomach time and sitting play
Torticollis • Head tilted to the side and rotated to the opposite side • Torticollis can be obvious or subtle • Head position can lead to flat head
Infection Control • Immature immune system • BPD and Cardiac conditions • RSV • Child care
Needs of Families • Emotional responses and support networks • Shift of trust from hospital to community providers • Compensatory Parenting
Emotional responses and support networks • Parent may “fall apart” after discharge even though baby is okay • Post-traumatic reactions to smells & sounds in the community that may trigger memory of NICU • FSN, March of Dimes, Hospital Reunions
Shift of trust from hospital to community • Neonatologist Pediatrician • NICU specialists EI/CSC providers • NICU nurse daily caregivers
Compensatory Parenting • Tend to try to compensate for perceived loss • Parenting should be based on developmental info & family values • Parenting should not be based on fear and guilt
Services Needed • Consultation & Anticipatory Guidance • Observation & Monitoring • Initial Home Visits • Coordination of Services
Consultation & Anticipatory Guidance • Relationship begins with parent/caregiver and evolves toward infant • Parent brings expertise from NICU experience • Routine assessment of “how things are going?” • Partners in problem solving not solutions • Prepare family for “what to expect next”
Observation & Monitoring • Looking for subtle qualitative differences not measurable delays • Should monitor over time since some differences may appear at various developmental stages. • Encourage families to stay enrolled in services at least until18 mos. when motor & language can be assessed.
Initial Home Visits • May need to be more frequent due to baby’s rapid growth & development • May take longer due to amount of concerns and mother’s need to “tell her story” • May be difficult to schedule due to other appointments, stress of having visitor and desire to “lay claim” on their baby.
Coordination of Services • Services may include medical, developmental, legal, social and support. • Important to be sensitive to # of service providers involved with family • Communication& collaboration between providers is critical and challenging