Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants. / Sgandurra, Giuseppina; Beani, Elena; Inguaggiato, Emanuela; Lorentzen, Jakob; Nielsen, Jens Bo; Cioni, Giovanni.

In: Neural Plasticity, Vol. 2019, 7517351, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sgandurra, G, Beani, E, Inguaggiato, E, Lorentzen, J, Nielsen, JB & Cioni, G 2019, 'Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants', Neural Plasticity, vol. 2019, 7517351. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/7517351

APA

Sgandurra, G., Beani, E., Inguaggiato, E., Lorentzen, J., Nielsen, J. B., & Cioni, G. (2019). Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants. Neural Plasticity, 2019, [7517351]. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/7517351

Vancouver

Sgandurra G, Beani E, Inguaggiato E, Lorentzen J, Nielsen JB, Cioni G. Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants. Neural Plasticity. 2019;2019. 7517351. https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/7517351

Author

Sgandurra, Giuseppina ; Beani, Elena ; Inguaggiato, Emanuela ; Lorentzen, Jakob ; Nielsen, Jens Bo ; Cioni, Giovanni. / Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants. In: Neural Plasticity. 2019 ; Vol. 2019.

Bibtex

@article{bc3793aaa46a40dfb4942848c9862877,
title = "Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants",
abstract = "Parenting a preterm infant is more challenging than a full-term one. Parent involvement in early intervention programs seems to have positive psychosocial effects on both the child and parent. CareToy is an innovative smart system that provides an intensive individualized home-based family-centred EI in preterm infants between 3 and 9 age-corrected months. A RCT study, preceded by a pilot study, has been recently carried out to evaluate the effects of CareToy intervention on neurodevelopmental outcomes with respect to Standard Care. This study aims at evaluating the effects of CareToy early intervention on parenting stress in preterm infants. Parents (mother and father) of a subgroup of infants enrolled in the RCT filled out a self-report questionnaire on parenting stress (Parenting Stress Index-Short Form (PSI-SF)) before (T0) and after (T1) the CareToy or Standard Care period (4 weeks), according to the allocation of their preterm infant. For twins, an individual questionnaire for each one was filled out. Results obtained from mothers and fathers were separately analysed with nonparametric tests. 44 mothers and 44 fathers of 44 infants (24 CareToy/20 Standard Care) filled out the PSI-SF at T0 and at T1. CareToy intervention was mainly managed by mothers. A significant (p < 0.05) reduction in Parental Distress subscale in the CareToy group versus Standard Care was found in the mothers. No differences were found among the fathers. CareToy training seems to be effective in reducing parental distress in mothers, who spent more time on CareToy intervention. These findings confirm the importance of parental involvement in early intervention programs. This trial is registered with Clinical Trial.gov NCT01990183.",
author = "Giuseppina Sgandurra and Elena Beani and Emanuela Inguaggiato and Jakob Lorentzen and Nielsen, {Jens Bo} and Giovanni Cioni",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1155/2019/7517351",
language = "English",
volume = "2019",
journal = "Neural Plasticity",
issn = "2090-5904",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects on Parental Stress of Early Home-Based CareToy Intervention in Low-Risk Preterm Infants

AU - Sgandurra, Giuseppina

AU - Beani, Elena

AU - Inguaggiato, Emanuela

AU - Lorentzen, Jakob

AU - Nielsen, Jens Bo

AU - Cioni, Giovanni

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Parenting a preterm infant is more challenging than a full-term one. Parent involvement in early intervention programs seems to have positive psychosocial effects on both the child and parent. CareToy is an innovative smart system that provides an intensive individualized home-based family-centred EI in preterm infants between 3 and 9 age-corrected months. A RCT study, preceded by a pilot study, has been recently carried out to evaluate the effects of CareToy intervention on neurodevelopmental outcomes with respect to Standard Care. This study aims at evaluating the effects of CareToy early intervention on parenting stress in preterm infants. Parents (mother and father) of a subgroup of infants enrolled in the RCT filled out a self-report questionnaire on parenting stress (Parenting Stress Index-Short Form (PSI-SF)) before (T0) and after (T1) the CareToy or Standard Care period (4 weeks), according to the allocation of their preterm infant. For twins, an individual questionnaire for each one was filled out. Results obtained from mothers and fathers were separately analysed with nonparametric tests. 44 mothers and 44 fathers of 44 infants (24 CareToy/20 Standard Care) filled out the PSI-SF at T0 and at T1. CareToy intervention was mainly managed by mothers. A significant (p < 0.05) reduction in Parental Distress subscale in the CareToy group versus Standard Care was found in the mothers. No differences were found among the fathers. CareToy training seems to be effective in reducing parental distress in mothers, who spent more time on CareToy intervention. These findings confirm the importance of parental involvement in early intervention programs. This trial is registered with Clinical Trial.gov NCT01990183.

AB - Parenting a preterm infant is more challenging than a full-term one. Parent involvement in early intervention programs seems to have positive psychosocial effects on both the child and parent. CareToy is an innovative smart system that provides an intensive individualized home-based family-centred EI in preterm infants between 3 and 9 age-corrected months. A RCT study, preceded by a pilot study, has been recently carried out to evaluate the effects of CareToy intervention on neurodevelopmental outcomes with respect to Standard Care. This study aims at evaluating the effects of CareToy early intervention on parenting stress in preterm infants. Parents (mother and father) of a subgroup of infants enrolled in the RCT filled out a self-report questionnaire on parenting stress (Parenting Stress Index-Short Form (PSI-SF)) before (T0) and after (T1) the CareToy or Standard Care period (4 weeks), according to the allocation of their preterm infant. For twins, an individual questionnaire for each one was filled out. Results obtained from mothers and fathers were separately analysed with nonparametric tests. 44 mothers and 44 fathers of 44 infants (24 CareToy/20 Standard Care) filled out the PSI-SF at T0 and at T1. CareToy intervention was mainly managed by mothers. A significant (p < 0.05) reduction in Parental Distress subscale in the CareToy group versus Standard Care was found in the mothers. No differences were found among the fathers. CareToy training seems to be effective in reducing parental distress in mothers, who spent more time on CareToy intervention. These findings confirm the importance of parental involvement in early intervention programs. This trial is registered with Clinical Trial.gov NCT01990183.

U2 - 10.1155/2019/7517351

DO - 10.1155/2019/7517351

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30804992

VL - 2019

JO - Neural Plasticity

JF - Neural Plasticity

SN - 2090-5904

M1 - 7517351

ER -

ID: 216478214