2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1552-6909.2006.00095.x
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Interruptions to Breastfeeding Dyads on Postpartum Day 1 in a University Hospital

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Cited by 17 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The intervention in this study was daily for 10 days, whereas Urech et al 20 (n = 39) investigated the effects of a single 10-minute session. 71 The majority of these interruptions were by the primary registered nurse and personal care assistants. The timing of the measures may also play a role in the results.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The intervention in this study was daily for 10 days, whereas Urech et al 20 (n = 39) investigated the effects of a single 10-minute session. 71 The majority of these interruptions were by the primary registered nurse and personal care assistants. The timing of the measures may also play a role in the results.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such findings may underscore the importance of intensity or dose of the intervention. 71 Similarly, hospitalized antepartum patients (n = 39) reported frequent disruptions from interruptions and noise, especially during the night, negatively affecting their ability to sleep. While the current study evaluated blood pressure within minutes of listening to the GI CD, a previous study (n = 69) measured daytime ambulatory blood pressures weekly but not necessarily in relation to listening.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, motherinfant dyads tend to have fewer interruptions or separations for resident or student teaching, and mother-infant dyads spend more time rooming-in. 52,53 The number of interruptions has been negatively correlated with the frequency of breastfeeding, maternal perceptions of breastfeeding success, and maternal satisfaction. 52,53 Because of these concerns and the recognition that separating mothers and infants can adversely impact breastfeeding success, recent recommendations call for providers to conduct newborn examinations and screening tests in the patient's room to reduce maternal-infant separation time, 54 and to limit visiting hours except for the mother's primary support person.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The negative consequences of hospital birth, including lack of sleep, reduced breastfeeding and maternal dissatisfaction with the birth/post-birth experience are, at least in part, consequences of mother-infant separation in the immediate and early postnatal period, and of disruption occurring in the postnatal ward environment that inhibits mothers and babies from behaving in an instinctive manner. Morrison et al [66], for example, documented the effects of postnatal-ward disruption on the mother-infant dyad, recording a mean of 54 interruptions per participant during the 12-hour observation period (8am to 8pm on postnatal day 1), lasting an average of 17 minutes each. These "frequent, erratic, and lengthy" (p713) interruptions, and the concomitant lack of private, quiet time alone with their family, were described as extremely disruptive by mothers in this study and others [35,67,68].…”
Section: Sleep Disruption and Separation In Early Infancymentioning
confidence: 99%