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Quality of life of parents of very preterm infants 4 months after birth: a mixed methods study
Knowledge about parental quality of life (QoL) is paramount to family-centred and integrated healthcare on prematurity, but evidence is limited. We aimed to explore mothers' and fathers' perspectives about their QoL 4 months after a very preterm childbirth. This is a cross-sectional mixed...
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Published in: | Health and quality of life outcomes 2018-09, Vol.16 (1), p.178-178, Article 178 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Knowledge about parental quality of life (QoL) is paramount to family-centred and integrated healthcare on prematurity, but evidence is limited. We aimed to explore mothers' and fathers' perspectives about their QoL 4 months after a very preterm childbirth.
This is a cross-sectional mixed methods study using a convergent design. Parents of very preterm infants were systematically recruited at all level III neonatal intensive care units in the Northern health region of Portugal for one year. Four months after childbirth, 61 mothers and 56 fathers filled-in the World Health Organization Quality of Life - BREF Inventory, and 26 couples were interviewed. Linear regression models were computed to assess the association between participants' characteristics and the QoL. Qualitative data were thematically analysed.
A quantitative analysis revealed that the perception of QoL was not significantly different by gender. QoL scores increased slightly from the environment (Mean (SD): 72.1 (14.2)) to the psychological domains (Mean (SD): 78.7 (14.4)). All scores were influenced by psychological characteristics. Socioeconomic position influenced both parents' perceptions concerning the environment domain, and maternal physical and psychological QoL. Infant-related factors were associated with overall QoL among women and with the physical, psychological, social and environment domains among men. Qualitative findings indicated accommodation mechanisms that intertwine the focus on constraining factors (surveillance, sleep disturbances, non-supportive healthcare policies, hygienization) with facilitating factors (social support, accessibility/quality of healthcare, opportunities for developing parental skills). These processes were anchored in child-centredness and a framework that construct hierarchies of hope and expectations about infant's health and development.
To capture parental QoL using mixed methods raises awareness for developing intersectoral family-centred policies, integrated health services and focused-interventions to decrease the disempowering effects of surveillance and hygienization. |
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ISSN: | 1477-7525 1477-7525 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s12955-018-1011-y |