Title of article :
Comparing the Effect of Breast Milk Odor and Incubator Cover on Nutritional Adequacy of Premature Infants: A Quasi-Experimental Study
Author/Authors :
Saberi Louyeh, Zahra School of Nursing and Midwifery - Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Iran , Naderifar, Mahin Department of Pediatrics - School of Nursing and Midwifery - Zabol University of Medical Sciences, Iran , Faghihi, Hamed Anesthesia Department - Paramedical School - Zahedan University of Medical Sciences and Health Services, Iran , Lessen Knoll, Brenda S. School of Nursing - IllinoisWesleyan University, Bloomington, USA , Mahmoodi, Nasrin Community Nursing Research Center - School of Nursing and Midwifery, Zahedan, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Premature babies face nutritional problems caused by underdevelopment and lack of coordination between sucking,
swallowing, and breathing. Appropriate early interventions are needed to promote the nutritional adequacy of these infants.
Objectives: This study was designed to compare the effect of breast milk odor and incubator cover on the nutritional adequacy of
premature infants.
Methods: A quasi-experimental study was conducted on 105 preterm infants aged 28 - 33 weeks who were admitted to the Neonatal
Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of Ali Ibn Abi Taleb Hospital in Zahedan in 2018. The subjects were selected via convenience sampling and
randomized into three groups: breast milk odor (BMO), incubator cover (IC), and control. Infants in the IC group were placed in an
incubator for two hours before feeding. In theBMOgroup, a gauze soaked with breast milk was placed 1.5 cm away from the infant’s
nose in the incubator, and a prescribed amount of milk was given by a syringe to the infant through the mouth. The amount of milk
that the baby orally received in the first 10 min (nutritional adequacy) was recorded by a camera, and the results were compared in
the three groups.
Results: One-way analysis of variance showed a statistically significant difference between the control group and the two groups
of incubator cover and breast milk odor (P < 0.001) such that nutritional adequacy was lower in the control group than in the two
other groups.
Conclusions: Both the smell of breast milk and incubator cover improved the nutritional adequacy of premature infants and enabled
them to orally receive more breast milk.
Keywords :
Breast Milk Odor , Incubator Cover , Premature Infant , Nutritional Adequacy
Journal title :
medical-surgical nursing journal