Predictors of Improvement in Parental Stress After the First Three Months at Home with a Medically Fragile Infant

Postier, Andrea C and Foster, Laurie P and Remke, Stacy and Simpson, Jane and Friedrichsdorf, Stefan J and Brearley, Sarah G (2023) Predictors of Improvement in Parental Stress After the First Three Months at Home with a Medically Fragile Infant. Maternal and child health journal. ISSN 1573-6628

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Abstract

Little is known about the early stress experiences of parents of infants with serious life-limiting/life-threatening conditions during the initial months after discharge from hospital. The aim of the study was to measure change, and predictors of change, in parenting stress at the time of transition from hospital to home (T1) with a medically fragile infant, and after a 3-month period (T2). Parents of infants identified as meeting ≥ 1 palliative care referral criterion were recruited in a Midwestern United States tertiary pediatric hospital (2012-2014) within 2 weeks of hospital discharge. A repeated measures design was used to assess change on a validated parenting stress inventory over the two timepoints (T1 and T2). Fifty-two parents (61 infants) participated at T1 and 44 (85%) at T2. On discharge (T1) stress was moderately high 3 months post discharge (T2) overall and domain-specific stress scores improved, except stress related to parent role functioning and participation in their child's medical care. Independent predictors of improvement in overall parenting stress scores (T2-T1) were being a younger parent and having experienced prior pregnancy-related loss. The time of discharge from hospital to home is often stressful for parents of medically fragile infants. Improvements were found during the first 3 months at home, but improvement was minimal for stress related to role function and providing medical care. Past experience with pregnancy-related loss and being younger were associated with improvement in stress across theoretical domains. Screening for stress should be included as part of routine pre- and post-neonatal intensive care unit discharge psychosocial assessments of parents caring for infants with serious illness to ensure their unique support needs continue to be met over time.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Maternal and child health journal
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/no_not_funded
Subjects:
?? psychological distressvery low birth weightpalliative careinfantparentingno - not fundednopediatrics, perinatology, and child healthpublic health, environmental and occupational healthepidemiologyobstetrics and gynaecology ??
ID Code:
224718
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
08 Oct 2024 13:45
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
10 Oct 2024 16:35