학술논문

Knowledge of mothers and fathers' experiences of the early in-home care of premature infants supported by video consultations with a neonatal nurse.
Document Type
Article
Source
BMC Nursing. 4/7/2021, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p1-10. 10p. 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
Subject
*MEDICAL consultation
*HOME nursing
*ATTITUDES of mothers
*FATHERS' attitudes
*SOCIAL support
*HOME care services
*RESEARCH methodology
*NEONATAL nursing
*INTERVIEWING
*HEALTH literacy
*QUALITATIVE research
*PEDIATRIC nurses
*RESEARCH funding
*CONTENT analysis
*THEMATIC analysis
*STATISTICAL sampling
*DATA analysis software
*TELEMEDICINE
Language
ISSN
1472-6955
Abstract
Aim: To gain in-depth knowledge of mothers' and fathers' experiences of the whole trajectory of an early in-home care programme supported by video consultations with a neonatal nurse. Design: A qualitative interview study. Methods: Data were collected through dyadic semi-structured interviews with mothers and fathers participating in virtual early in-home care programmes and were subjected to inductive content analysis. Findings: The mothers and fathers were anxious about mastering the care of their premature infants at the start of the early in-home care phase but gradually developed confidence by the completion of the early in-home care programme. Being at home during the early in-home care programme gave the mothers and fathers an opportunity to test their decision making concerning the care of the infant while having the ability to obtain support from nurses when needed. Conclusion: Our findings indicate that the trajectory of early in-home care programmes combined with video consultations contributes to parents' increased confidence as mothers and fathers. Trial registration: Clinical trial registration: REG-113-2014 and SJ-431. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]