Stress beyond the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) Discharge: Implications to Outcome

Journal Title: Pediatrics and Neonatal Nursing – Open Journal - Year 2016, Vol 3, Issue 1

Abstract

Purpose: The high-risk parental experience in the neonatal intensive care environment is a major stress event that is not necessarily resolved with discharge. Many parents report “walking on eggshells” with worry and stress for up to a year beyond the birth of their infant. Because stressors can induce behavioral, physiological, and biochemical changes to such a degree that family adaptation is challenged, attempting to resolve stressors before the discharge should be a goal. The ethical concept of beneficence (doing good) provides the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nurse with a framework for wanting to lower stressors as much as possible prior to discharge. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between high-risk experiences including high-risk pregnancies, deliveries, and NICU admissions and unresolved parental stress up to a year after delivery. Method: Women in a day care center with infants under a year old were tested for their emotional status and pregnancy related demographics. Principal Results: Findings show a positive correlation between two factors, both NICU admission of a newborn and parental stress (r=.88) and a high risk primiparous births without NICU admissions and parental stress (r=.72). Major Conclusion: While this is a pilot study, the findings illustrate unresolved parental stress well beyond the birth of the baby, providing ethical support for early identification of stressed parents and interventions to normalize that stress before discharge. When parents report significant stress after their deliveries or infants’ NICU admissions, and there is no specific intervention to identify and reduce this stress, high levels of stress may last and be measurable even a year later.

Authors and Affiliations

Amy Nagorski Johnson

Keywords

Related Articles

Assessing the Evidence: Student Response System Versus Computer Based Testing for Undertaking Multiple Choice Question Assessment in Undergraduate Nursing Education

There is a dearth of evidence focusing on student preferences for computer-based testing versus testing via student response systems for summative assessment in undergraduate education. This quantitative study compared t...

Factors and Costs Associated With the Use of Registered Nurse Overtime in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Background: Planning the number of registered nurses (RN) per shift in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) is a constant stressor and overtime is often used to assure adequate nurse to patient ratios at high costs. A...

Burden of Illness for Neural Tube Defects: Canadian Perspective

Background: Neural Tube Defects (NTDs) are serious birth defects of which Spina Bifida (SB) is the most common. This paper aims to provide an estimate of the burden of illness for patients with SB and their caregivers in...

Pediatric Headache in the Emergency Department

Headache is defined as a somatic complaint. Incidence has increased in the last years probably due to children's lifestyle changes. Headaches have a wide variety of causes, either primary or secondary ones. While the maj...

Giant Scrotal Hernia in a Tiny Male Infant

Inguinal hernia is a common diagnosis in children. A real scrotal hernia is less common and underreported in medical textbooks. In this case a tiny Libyan boy was admitted with a big swelling of the left groin and hemisc...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP555338
  • DOI 10.17140/PNNOJ-3-120
  • Views 168
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Amy Nagorski Johnson (2016). Stress beyond the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) Discharge: Implications to Outcome. Pediatrics and Neonatal Nursing – Open Journal, 3(1), 15-19. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-555338