2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.jped.2017.05.014
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Clinical application of the Newborn Behavioral Observation (NBO) System to characterize the behavioral pattern of newborns at biological and social risk

Abstract: The Newborn Behavioral Observation increased the mothers' knowledge about the behavior of their children, especially in mothers of preterm newborns, and identified differences in the behavior of preterm newborns and full-term newborns regarding the motor and responsiveness domains.

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
3
0
1

Year Published

2020
2020
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
4
1
1

Relationship

0
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 3 publications
0
3
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…In our previous work, we found that the NBO was associated with reduced PPD symptoms in mothers of healthy term infants (Nugent, Bartlett, & Valim, 2014), while Shah (2018) reported that the NBO was effective in ameliorating maternal perinatal anxiety symptoms in a sample of women diagnosed with anxiety during pregnancy. Previous literature also suggests that the NBO promotes parents' ability to read their infant's cues (Dittz, Alves, Duarte, & Magalhães, 2017;Guimarães, Lindgren Alves, Cardoso, Penido, & de Castro Magalhães, 2017;McManus & Nugent, 2014;Simkin-Tran, Harman, & Nicolson, 2020) and improve provider confidence to work with medically fragile newborns (Kristensen, Vinter, Nickell, & Kronborg, 2019;McManus & Nugent, 2011). In a nonrandomised cluster-controlled design, Høifødt et al (2020) found that in a well-functioning, well-educated sample of mothers of full-term infants, mothers learned significantly more from the follow-up about the baby's signals and needs in relation to sleep/wake patterns, social interaction, and crying/fussiness, but the NBO was not associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms and parenting stress at 4 months postpartum.…”
Section: Relevance To the Field Of Early Childhood Mental Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In our previous work, we found that the NBO was associated with reduced PPD symptoms in mothers of healthy term infants (Nugent, Bartlett, & Valim, 2014), while Shah (2018) reported that the NBO was effective in ameliorating maternal perinatal anxiety symptoms in a sample of women diagnosed with anxiety during pregnancy. Previous literature also suggests that the NBO promotes parents' ability to read their infant's cues (Dittz, Alves, Duarte, & Magalhães, 2017;Guimarães, Lindgren Alves, Cardoso, Penido, & de Castro Magalhães, 2017;McManus & Nugent, 2014;Simkin-Tran, Harman, & Nicolson, 2020) and improve provider confidence to work with medically fragile newborns (Kristensen, Vinter, Nickell, & Kronborg, 2019;McManus & Nugent, 2011). In a nonrandomised cluster-controlled design, Høifødt et al (2020) found that in a well-functioning, well-educated sample of mothers of full-term infants, mothers learned significantly more from the follow-up about the baby's signals and needs in relation to sleep/wake patterns, social interaction, and crying/fussiness, but the NBO was not associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms and parenting stress at 4 months postpartum.…”
Section: Relevance To the Field Of Early Childhood Mental Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our previous work, we found that the NBO was associated with reduced PPD symptoms in mothers of healthy term infants (Nugent, Bartlett, & Valim, 2014), while Shah (2018) reported that the NBO was effective in ameliorating maternal perinatal anxiety symptoms in a sample of women diagnosed with anxiety during pregnancy. Previous literature also suggests that the NBO promotes parents’ ability to read their infant's cues (Dittz, Alves, Duarte, & Magalhães, 2017; Guimarães, Lindgren Alves, Cardoso, Penido, & de Castro Magalhães, 2017; McManus & Nugent, 2014; Simkin‐Tran, Harman, & Nicolson, 2020) and improve provider confidence to work with medically fragile newborns (Kristensen, Vinter, Nickell, & Kronborg, 2019; McManus & Nugent, 2011). In a nonrandomised cluster‐controlled design, Høifødt et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Processing birth experiences: A content analysis of women's preferences. Midwifery, 69, 29-38. https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.midw 2018…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A compreensão das mães acerca de aspectos do desenvolvimento dos filhos pode contribuir para a evolução destes (HEKAVEI, OLIVEIRA, 2009;FEITOZA et al, 2016;GUIMARÃES et al, 2018 (ENGLE, 2006;MACHADO et al, 2014;SANTOS, 2010). O foco dessa preocupação não se restrige apenas à morbidade ou mortalidade durante o período neonatal, mas também nos seus efeitos em longo prazo na vida dessas crianças.…”
Section: Fatores Que Influenciam No Desenvolvimento Motorunclassified