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Alberta Family Integrated Care™ and Standard Care: A Qualitative Study of Mothers’ Experiences of their Journeying to Home from the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Rachael Dien, Karen Benzies, Pilar Zanoni, Jana Kurilova

2022Global Qualitative Nursing Research21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Globally, one in ten infants is born preterm. Most preterm infants require care in a level II Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), which are highly technological critical care environments that can be overwhelming for parents. Alberta Family Integrated Care (AB-FICare™) is an approach to care that provides strategies to integrate parents into their infant’s care team. This sub-study is the first to compare mothers’ experiences in the context of AB-FICare™ and standard care. Semi-structured interviews with mothers from AB-FICare™ ( n = 14) and standard care ( n = 12) NICUs were analyzed using interpretive description informed by grounded theory methods. We identified a major theme of Journeying to Home with six categories: Recovering from Birth, Adapting to the NICU, Caring for Baby, Coping with Daily Disruption, Seeing Progress, and Supporting Parenting. Mothers in the AB-FICare™ group identified an enhancement to standard care related to building reciprocal trust with healthcare providers that accelerated Journeying to Home.

Topics & Concepts

Neonatal intensive care unitNursingGrounded theoryQualitative researchIntensive careContext (archaeology)MedicineHealth carePsychologyDevelopmental psychologyPediatricsIntensive care medicineSociologyEconomicsEconomic growthBiologyPaleontologySocial scienceInfant Development and Preterm CareFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care UnitsFamily and Disability Support Research