Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care

The dissertation, comprising a clinical intervention and three supporting studies, aimed to assess if it is possible to prevent nonsynostotic plagiocephaly while promoting safe infant sleeping practices. Five individuals were trained to assess cranial asymmetry and then reliability-tested; the inter...

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Main Author: Freda Lennartsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Clinical Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/12/3946
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spelling doaj-a4eed91d064e49ec96867c4f93984c2c2020-12-06T00:00:38ZengMDPI AGJournal of Clinical Medicine2077-03832020-12-0193946394610.3390/jcm9123946Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health CareFreda Lennartsson0Department of Pediatrics, The Sahlgrenska Academy, Institution for Clinical Sciences, University of Gothenburg, 416 85 Gothenburg, SwedenThe dissertation, comprising a clinical intervention and three supporting studies, aimed to assess if it is possible to prevent nonsynostotic plagiocephaly while promoting safe infant sleeping practices. Five individuals were trained to assess cranial asymmetry and then reliability-tested; the interpreted results indicate substantial strength of rater-agreement. Intervention participants were allocated to group. Only intervention group nurses participated in the continuing education on plagiocephaly developed for nurses. A survey compared information intervention and control group parents received from nurses; intervention group parents were significantly more aware of recommendations than the controls. Nurse education was evaluated by asking intervention and control group nurses and parents two open-ended questions; the intervention group reported new re-positioning strategies. The effect of the intervention on cranial shape was evaluated by assessing asymmetry at 2, 4, and 12 months (176 intervention group; 92 controls). It was nine times more common that cranial asymmetry at two months reversed by four months when parents were aware of written recommendations from their nurse (OR = 9.09 [0.02; 0.48], <i>p</i> = 0.004) when adjusted for group. An infant’s risk of asymmetry persisting until 12 months was significantly reduced in the intervention group (RR = 0.35 [0.13; 0.94], <i>p</i> = 0.03). Preventing brachycephaly was difficult. Conclusions: the assessors were considered reliable; educating nurses promoted the integration of new recommendations in practice; the intervention was associated with early reversal of nonsynostotic plagiocephaly.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/12/3946assessmentschild healtheducationinfantsinterventionnonsynostotic plagiocephaly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Freda Lennartsson
spellingShingle Freda Lennartsson
Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care
Journal of Clinical Medicine
assessments
child health
education
infants
intervention
nonsynostotic plagiocephaly
author_facet Freda Lennartsson
author_sort Freda Lennartsson
title Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care
title_short Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care
title_full Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care
title_fullStr Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care
title_full_unstemmed Nonsynostotic Plagiocephaly: Prevention Strategies in Child Health Care
title_sort nonsynostotic plagiocephaly: prevention strategies in child health care
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Clinical Medicine
issn 2077-0383
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The dissertation, comprising a clinical intervention and three supporting studies, aimed to assess if it is possible to prevent nonsynostotic plagiocephaly while promoting safe infant sleeping practices. Five individuals were trained to assess cranial asymmetry and then reliability-tested; the interpreted results indicate substantial strength of rater-agreement. Intervention participants were allocated to group. Only intervention group nurses participated in the continuing education on plagiocephaly developed for nurses. A survey compared information intervention and control group parents received from nurses; intervention group parents were significantly more aware of recommendations than the controls. Nurse education was evaluated by asking intervention and control group nurses and parents two open-ended questions; the intervention group reported new re-positioning strategies. The effect of the intervention on cranial shape was evaluated by assessing asymmetry at 2, 4, and 12 months (176 intervention group; 92 controls). It was nine times more common that cranial asymmetry at two months reversed by four months when parents were aware of written recommendations from their nurse (OR = 9.09 [0.02; 0.48], <i>p</i> = 0.004) when adjusted for group. An infant’s risk of asymmetry persisting until 12 months was significantly reduced in the intervention group (RR = 0.35 [0.13; 0.94], <i>p</i> = 0.03). Preventing brachycephaly was difficult. Conclusions: the assessors were considered reliable; educating nurses promoted the integration of new recommendations in practice; the intervention was associated with early reversal of nonsynostotic plagiocephaly.
topic assessments
child health
education
infants
intervention
nonsynostotic plagiocephaly
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/12/3946
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