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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
91

Preterm Infant Incubator Humidity Levels: A Systematic Review

Glass, Laurie 01 January 2019 (has links)
Numerous scholars have reported that inconsistent incubator humidity in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) requires attention. Evidence synthesis was needed to assist the identification of optimal incubator humidity levels and duration to decrease transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and the potential for infection. The purpose of this doctoral project was to appraise and synthesize the evidence of preterm outcomes related to incubator humidity. The practice-focused question addressed what patient outcomes were impacted by incubator humidity level and duration in premature infants < 32 0/7 weeks cared for in the NICU. The foundation of this project was the Joanna Briggs Institute method for systematic reviews. Mefford’s theory of health promotion for the preterm infant was used to address the wholeness of the preterm infant’s body system. Evidence was classified using the Johns Hopkins evidence-based practice levels and quality of evidence. The search was conducted in 8 databases, and citation searching was used to identify 340 articles, 12 of which met the inclusion criteria. The evidence demonstrates that the practice of incubator humidity is warranted; however, it does not come without risks. Microbial growth was increased in high levels of incubator humidity. Unnecessary TEWL was prevented by lowering high levels of incubator humidity after the 1st week, improving skin barrier formation. Incubator humidity of 60%–70% in the 1st week was effective in preventing TEWL in infants born ≥ 26 weeks; however, future research is needed for infants < 26 weeks. When optimal levels and duration of incubator humidity are achieved, positive social change will occur from the improved outcomes of the smallest neonatal patients.
92

Enacting medication administration as nursing practice in a neonatal intensive care unit: a praxiographic study

Neander, Wendy 20 May 2020 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to offer a description of the complexity of nurses’ medication administration practices in relationships with technology. The clinical situations and circumstances in which nurses administer medications today are comprised of rapidly changing technological initiatives that are intended to support safe, efficient care. Nurses’ medication administration practices are not immune to a rapidly changing technological health care environment. Research and literature has documented medication administration occurs in complex situations and nurses apply particular knowledge that supports decision-making and clinical practices for patient safety. Praxiographic methodology was used to describe deeply embedded knowledge and values that shape and guide contemporary nursing practice. Lack of attention to knowledge and values that shape and guide nursing practice and care, may contribute to the risk that those practices may be lost as nurses retire amongst a rapidly changing healthcare environment. A highly technical Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) was the location for the study. Participants included twelve NICU nurses and a pharmacist. The research findings included the significance of understanding NICU nurses’ use of local and universal maps to navigate the complexity of medication administration. Furthermore, the research documented NICU nurses’ medication administration practices as inseparable from technology. Further practice-based research is recommended to support the development of technologies that incorporate nurses’ medication administration practices. / Graduate
93

Essays in Health Economics

Cheng, Yi January 2020 (has links)
This dissertation consists of three essays in health economics, paying special attention to neonatal care provision and newborn health outcomes in the United States. The first chapter evaluates physician productivity, focusing on the matching between physician skills and patient conditions. High U.S. spending on health care is commonly attributed to its intensity of specialized, high-tech medical care. A growing body of research focuses on physicians whose medical decisions shape treatment intensity, costs, and patient outcomes. Often overlooked in this research is the assignment of physician skills to patient conditions, which may strongly affect health outcomes and productivity. This matching may be especially important in the case of hospital admissions as high-frequency fluctuations in patient flow make it challenging to maintain effective matches between the best-suited physicians and their patients. This paper focuses on hospitals’ responses to demand shocks induced by unscheduled high-risk admissions. I show that these demand shocks result in physician–patient mismatches when hospitals are congested. Specifically, highly specialized physicians who are brought in to treat unscheduled high-risk admissions also treat previously admitted lower-risk patients. This leads to increased treatment intensity for lower-risk patients, which I attribute to persistence in physician practice style. Despite the greater treatment intensity, I find no detectable improvement in health outcomes, which prima facie could be viewed as waste. However, the mismatches observed only at high congestion levels more likely reflect hospitals’ careful assessment of costs and benefits when assigning physicians to patients – maintaining preferred physician–patient matching can be particularly costly when congestion is high. My findings highlight the need to consider both heterogeneity within patient and physician type, and furthermore show how the common phenomenon of demand uncertainty can promote mismatch between these types. The second chapter assesses hospital self-reported facility data quality using annual Institutional Cost Report (ICR). In the United States, hospital facilities are under public and government supervision. The central motivation behind this is that overbuilding and redundancy in health care facilities will lead to overutilization and higher health care costs. However, little is known about the effectiveness of these facility regulation policies. Taking certified capacities recorded by the Department of Health as reliable benchmarks, this paper presents evidence that hospitals upcode their neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) bed levels when reporting capacities in ICR. Reported NICU utilization in ICR is mostly under the top level NICU bed, which matches the bed capacity upcoding pattern. This indicates either significant overutilization which leads to NICU overcrowding, or upcoding in medical billing that results in inflated medical charges. Findings in this paper point to a potentially effective way for regulators and insurers to limit overutilization – improving hospitals’ compliance with their certified capacities. This paper also provides important guidelines for a large body of research that uses ICR data by developing an assessment of ICR data quality. The third chapter, which is joint work with Douglas Almond, measures gender inequality in perinatal health among Chinese-American newborns. The literature on “missing girls" suggests a net preference for sons both in China and among Chinese immigrants to the West. Perhaps surprisingly, we find that newborn Chinese-American girls are treated more intensively in US hospitals: they are kept longer following delivery, have more medical procedures performed, and have more hospital charges than predicted (by the non-Chinese gender difference). What might explain more aggressive medical treatment? We posit that hospitals are responding to worse health at birth of Chinese-American girls. We document higher rates of low birth weight, congenital anomalies, maternal hypertension, and lower APGAR scores among Chinese American girls – outcomes recorded prior to intensive neonatal medical care and relative to the non-Chinese gender gap. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to find that son preference may also compromise “survivor" health at birth. On net, compromised newborn health seems to outweigh the benefit of more aggressive neonatal hospital care for girls. Relative to non-Chinese gender differences, death on the first day of life and in the post-neonatal period is more common among Chinese-American girls, i.e. later than sex selection is typically believed to occur.
94

Att främja amning vid inneliggande vård på neonatalavdelning : En allmän litteraturöversikt

Bergström, Anna, Törnefjord Weinreich, Åsa January 2022 (has links)
Bakgrund: Av de ca 110 000 – 120 000 barn som föds årligen i Sverige, behöver drygt tio procent vård på neonatalavdelning. Att amma sitt barn har väldokumenterade fördelar och är särskilt anpassat för det individuella barnets behov vilket ger fördelar både på fullgångna och prematurfödda barn. Syfte: Syftet med studien är att belysa faktorer vilka påverkar det amningsfrämjande arbetet på neonatalavdelningar. Metod: Allmän litteraturöversikt som innefattar totalt 16 vetenskapliga artiklar. Samtliga artiklar vilka inkluderats i resultatet har granskats enligt kvalitetsmall. Resultat: Amning och bröstmjölk väcker starka och blandade känslor hos vårdpersonalen. Vårdpersonal som genomgått någon form av utbildning inom området amning var generellt mer positivt inställda till att ge amningsstöd trots påverkan på arbetsbördan. Flaskmatning sågs som ett bekvämt alternativ även om bröstmjölkens fördelar var väl kända. Slutsats: I vilken utsträckning amningsstöd utförs och vilken kvalitet det har beror på stor del på vårdpersonalens egna upplevelser och känslor gällande amning. Då få studier fanns att tillgå är det en indikation på att vidare forskning inom området behövs. / Background: In Sweden, approximately 110,000 – 120,000 babies are born every year. More than ten percent of all newborn babies born in Sweden are in need of care in neonatal care units. Breastfeeding has well-documented benefits and is specifically tailored to the needs of the individual child, providing benefits for both full-term and premature born babies. Aim: The purpose of the study is to shed light on factors that affect breastfeeding work in neonatal wards. Method: General literature review. Including a total of 16 scientific articles. All articles included in the results have been reviewed according to the quality template.  Results: Breastfeeding and breast milk triggered strong and mixed feelings in the health care workers. Healthcare professionals who had undergone some form of training in the field of breastfeeding were generally more positive towards providing breastfeeding support despite the impact on the workload. Bottle feeding was seen as a convenient option although the benefits of breast milk were well known. Conclusion: The extent to which breastfeeding support is performed and the quality of it depends largely on the healthcare staff's own experiences and feelings regarding breastfeeding. Since few studies were available, it is an indication that further research in the field is needed.
95

Are We on the Same Page About Skin-to-Skin Care? A Descriptive Correlational Study Exploring Skin-to-Skin Care for Postoperative NICU Infants.

Larocque, Catherine 22 September 2020 (has links)
Family-centered care (FCC) is considered the gold standard for care delivery in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). However, there are challenges with the implementation of FCC in practice and there is limited literature about how to tailor this approach for specialized NICU populations. To explore FCC for surgical neonates in the NICU, the concept was explored using Roger’s evolutionary concept analysis. Results illustrate that FCC in the NICU is a philosophy or care, rather than a set of interventions. The subsequent cross-sectional descriptive exploratory study showed that the surgical infants in our sample (n=11) received a limited amount of skin-to-skin care (median 0 mins/day) and parents reported challenges to being involved in their infant’s care. This thesis supports the challenges with the implementation of FCC in practice and both the need to consider multiple perspectives and the need for broader systemic change in order to support a FCC philosophy.
96

The role of the physiotherapist in the neonatal intensive care unit: perceptions from neonatal healthcare professionals

Ponto, Jamie January 2020 (has links)
Magister Scientiae (Physiotherapy) - MSc(Physio) / Background: The role of the physiotherapist in the neonatal intensive care unit is unclear. How other neonatal healthcare professionals and physiotherapists themselves perceive their role in the management of neonates, their practice patterns and services, their role in the neonatal intensive care multidisciplinary team, their use of evidence-based practice and awareness of the profession in this setting has not been well explored. This information is lacking in the South African healthcare context as well. Therefore, the aim of the study was to explore and describe the perception of doctors, nurses and physiotherapists of the role of the physiotherapist in public and private sector neonatal intensive care units in South Africa. Methods: A qualitative exploratory research design was used. All medical practitioners (paediatricians and neonatologists), nurses and physiotherapists working in the neonatal intensive care units in two private sector and two public sector hospitals in the Cape Metropole region in the Western Cape South Africa who provided consent to participate were included. An inclusive (total population) sampling method was used where all healthcare professionals working in these units were invited to an individual face-to-face audiotaped interview using a semi-structured interview guide and conducted by the researcher at a time and place convenient to the participants following informed consent. Data was transcribed verbatim and analysed using both deductive and inductive thematic content analysis to develop codes, categories and themes. Trustworthiness was ensured by ensuring credibility, conformability, dependability and transferability of data. Ethics was obtained from the relevant Institutional Review Board. Results: Twenty-one healthcare professionals participated, including doctors (n=5), nurses (n=6) and physiotherapists (n=10). The mean age in years of the participants was 41+/–11 years with the physiotherapists having the lowest mean age. The participants had various years of general and neonatal intensive care experience and physiotherapists in specific only had basic undergraduate qualifications with minimal specialised training in neonatal intensive care. Five major themes emerged namely: i) the role of the physiotherapists in the management of the neonatal ICU patient, ii) practice patterns and services iii) teamwork iv) training and qualifications including evidence-based practice, v) awareness of and exposure to neonatal intensive care physiotherapy. Conclusion: Physiotherapists working in this neonatal intensive care setting need to promote their profession through education of other neonatal healthcare professionals in order to improve awareness, referral patterns and integration into the multidisciplinary team. Evidence-based practices and improving training and skills development in the area of neonatal physiotherapy can be further explored in this setting.
97

Inflammatory Mediators of Stress Exposure and Neurodevelopment in Very Preterm Infants

Nist, Marliese Dion January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
98

Nursing Care Procedures, Thermal Regulation and Growth of the Moderately Premature Neonate in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Lewis, Lory A. January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
99

Making a Genetic Diagnosis in a Level IV Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Population: Who, When, How, and at What Cost?

Swaggart, Kayleigh A., Ph.D. 28 September 2018 (has links)
No description available.
100

Grow Through What You Go Through: A Qualitative Description of South Asian Immigrant Mothers’ NICU Experiences

Deol, Rosie January 2024 (has links)
Background: NICU experiences pose significant challenges for parents, especially immigrants, necessitating comprehensive support. South Asian immigrants, comprising 25% of Canada's visible minority population, face unique adversities related to gender roles, hindering access to essential health services and integration. Coupled with unfavourable social determinants of health (SDoH), these challenges worsen issues like inadequate prenatal care, education, and nutrition, predictors of adverse maternal and neonatal health outcomes. Existing studies lack insight into the specific experiences of South Asian immigrant mothers in the NICU. This study investigates these experiences. Methods: Using a qualitative descriptive approach, we recruited four participants for semi-structured interviews, supplemented by a demographic questionnaire and participant observation. Qualitative content analysis was employed for data analysis. Findings: Four key themes were identified from the interviews: (1) Seeking Understanding, (2) Cultural Influence on NICU Experience, (3) Motherhood Journey, and (4) Circle of Care. Implications: This study fills a gap in NICU research for South Asian immigrant women, providing a foundation for future nursing research and practice. It underscores the importance of communication and preparation for discharge delays to ease parental concerns. Additionally, it emphasizes culturally sensitive care practices and encourages further exploration of cultural influences on hospital experiences. Insights from this study can benefit other ethno-racial immigrant groups. / Thesis / Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) / Existing research offers insights into the general challenges and distress often associated with mothers' experiences in the NICU. However, there is little evidence to understand the specific experiences of South Asian immigrant mothers within this context. The objective of this thesis is to describe and understand the experiences in the NICU reported by this population. Employing a qualitative description methodology, this study engaged four eligible participants. Data collection entailed semi-structured interviews alongside a demographic questionnaire. Employing qualitative content analysis, four overarching themes were identified: (1) Seeking to Understand, (2) The Impact of South Asian Culture on the NICU Experience, (3) Becoming a Mother One Step at a Time, and (4) Circle of Care.

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