Parental Involvement in Enteral Nutrition in Neonatal Units

Last updated: April 3, 2024
Sponsor: University Hospital, Limoges
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

N/A

Treatment

enteral feeding with pushed syringe by the parents

Clinical Study ID

NCT05272956
87RI21_0030 (PREMALIM)
  • Ages > 3
  • All Genders

Study Summary

  • Hypothesis : Bolus feeding of the newborn with a syringe under parents' visual control increases parental presence when compared to enteral feeding with a syringe pump.

  • Main criteria : Comparison of parental presence (mean time in hours) between the two arms : pushed bolus syringe feeding under parent's visual control and enteral feeding with a syringe pump.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Gestational age between 30 and 34 WA (weeks of amenorrhea)
  • Patient affiliated to a social security scheme
  • Hospitalized in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU)
  • 3 days of life or more

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria: Corrected age> 34WA and 4 days

  • Mechanical ventilation or non-invasive ventilation with FIO2> 35%
  • Serious congenital malformation
  • Planned transfer to another hospital
  • Enteral nutrition <40ml / kg / day
  • Immediate post-operative care
  • Multiple pregnancy
  • Poor understanding of french • Secondary exclusion criteria
  • Digestive rest greater than 5 days
  • Death
  • No enteral nutrition pushed by parents

Study Design

Total Participants: 72
Treatment Group(s): 1
Primary Treatment: enteral feeding with pushed syringe by the parents
Phase:
Study Start date:
August 10, 2022
Estimated Completion Date:
February 10, 2025

Study Description

  • Nutrition is the cornerstone of neonatology. Adequate nutrition is necessary for a healthy brain growth and a physiological development. When oral feeding skills are not acquired, enteral feeding is used via a nasogastric tube by an electric syringe pump. The birth a premature child jeopardizes parent-infant bonding and hinders parental feeding skills. Family-centered care has shown to be beneficial for the child and his parents by promoting early interactions, which lay the foundations for the child's psychological development. As such, pushed bolus enteral feeding by the parents with a syringe has been a common practice in Sweden since the 1980s to involve the parents in enteral feeding practices. In France, this practice has been used in neonatal intensive care units (NICU). Two French studies on this subject have been published. One focused on using parental pushed bolus enteral feeding in a hospitalization at home setting, whereas the other study investigated the impact of parental observation on pushed bolus enteral feeding. To our knowledge, there is no study proving the superiority of bolus feeding with a syringe under parents' visual control over enteral feeding with a syringe pump.

  • This study is an open-label, randomized, comparative interventional study with an intention-to-treat analysis. We compared a control group (enteral nutrition with an electric syringe pump while the neonate is lying in a cocoon or carried by their parent) to an intervention group (pushed bolus enteral nutrition under parents' visual control)

  • In the control group, enteral feeding used an electric syringe pump.

  • In the intervention group, the first enteral feeding is pushed with a syringe by the nurse. Following enteral feeding attempts are pushed with a syringe by the parents only if they can or will grow. Bolus feeding speed is at the discretion of the person pushing the syringe (nurse or parent) and is adjusted to the child's signs of discomfort. When the parents are absent, enteral feeding is carried out with a syringe pump.

Connect with a study center

  • Centre Hospitalier Henri Duffaut

    Avignon, 84000
    France

    Active - Recruiting

  • Limoges university hospital

    Limoges, 87042
    France

    Active - Recruiting

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