Effect of Kangaroo Mother Care on Growth and Morbidity Pattern in Low Birth Weight Infants
Background: Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) is dened as skin-to-skin contact between a mother and her newborn baby derived from practical similarities to marsupial care giving, proximately exclusive breastfeeding and early discharge from hospital. This concept was proposed as an alternative to conv...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences University
2016-01-01
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Series: | Journal of Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences University |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.jkimsu.com/jkimsu-vol5no1/JKIMSU,%20Vol.%205,%20No.%201,%20Jan-March%202016%20Page%2091-99.pdf |
Summary: | Background: Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC) is dened
as skin-to-skin contact between a mother and her
newborn baby derived from practical similarities to
marsupial care giving, proximately exclusive
breastfeeding and early discharge from hospital. This
concept was proposed as an alternative to conventional
methods of care for low birth weight (LBW) infants,
and in replication to quandaries of earnest
overcrowding in Neonatal Intensive Care Units
(NICUs). KMC essentially utilizes the mother as a
natural incubator Aim and Objectives: The aim was to
assess the feasibility, acceptability and the
effectiveness of KMC in LBW infants. It avoids
agitation routinely experienced in busy ward. Material
and Methods: A pilot open-labeled quasi-randomised
clinical trial was conducted in Level III NICU of a
teaching institution. 60 newborn infants <2500 g,
meeting inclusion criteria were alternatively
randomised into two groups: Kangaroo Mother Care
(KMC) and Conventional Methods of Care (CMC).
Kangaroo mother care was practiced with minimum
total period of eight hours a day intermittently for the
intervention group while the controls remained in
incubators or cots. Weight, head circumference,
length, morbidity episodes, hospital stay, feeding
patterns were monitored for all infants till postmenstrual
age of 42 weeks in preterm babies or till a
weight of 2500 g is achieved in term SGA babies.
Results: The pilot study conrmed that trial processes
were efcient, the intervention was acceptable (to
mothers and nurses) and that the outcome measures
were appropriate; KMC babies achieved signicantly
better growth at the end of the study (For preterm
babies, weight, length and head circumference gain
were signicantly higher in the KMC group (weight
19.28±2.9g/day, length 0.99±0.56cm/week and head
circumference 0.72±0.07 cm/week) than in the CMC
group (P <0.001). A signicantly higher number of
babies in the CMC group suffered from hypothermia,
hypoglycemia, and sepsis. Conclusion: Kangaroo
mother care improves growth and reduces morbidities
in low birth weight infants. It is simple, acceptable to
mothers and can be continued at home.
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ISSN: | 2231-4261 2231-4261 |