Oral Feeding Delay Prevention in Preterm Newborns

NCT06184386 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 43

Last updated 2023-12-28

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Preventing oral feeding delays in preterm newborns remains a stake for NICU nowadays. Indeed, it lengthens hospitalization duration, distorts parent-newborns relationships, and increases the risks of adverse nursing outcomes. Does a routine individualized developmental preventive feeding care implying parents favors earlier autonomous oral feeding achievement in preterm newborns as compared with a standardized routine program of orofacial stimulations, despite neonatal risks that every preterm newborn cumulates during hospitalization stay ?

Conditions

  • Preventive Care

Interventions

OTHER

NIDCAPARENTALIM

PARENTALIM practice that strengthens the NIDCAP. It is proposed in a routine way in the NICU since 2019. PARENTALIM supports and monitors parental implication in nursing care. It is led by a speach language therapist specialized in early feeding development who proposes 5 individualized interviews and uses an educational booklet on eating development care with a lot of illustrations and few words.

BEHAVIORAL

SOFS

SOFS is a behavioral practice of orofacial stimulations. Il has been mainly carried out by nurses or a speach language therapist specialized in early feeding development. SOFS has been applied through routine protocol in the NICU until 2018.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • University Hospital, Caen

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • CHRISTEL BLAISON · Speach language Therapist at University Hospital

Eligibility

Min Age
3 Days
Max Age
10 Weeks
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2019-02-02
Primary Completion
2019-02-11
Completion
2022-04-15

Countries

  • France

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT06184386 on ClinicalTrials.gov