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The effect of labor medications on normal newborn behavior in the first hour after birth: A prospective cohort study

Skin-to-skin contact after birth between mother and baby has immediate and long-term advantages. Widström's 9 Stages of Newborn Behavior offer an opportunity to evaluate a baby in the natural, expected and optimal habitat. Intrapartum drugs, including fentanyl administered via epidural and synt...

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Published in:Early human development 2019-05, Vol.132, p.30-36
Main Authors: Brimdyr, Kajsa, Cadwell, Karin, Widström, Ann-Marie, Svensson, Kristin, Phillips, Rayle
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container_title Early human development
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creator Brimdyr, Kajsa
Cadwell, Karin
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Svensson, Kristin
Phillips, Rayle
description Skin-to-skin contact after birth between mother and baby has immediate and long-term advantages. Widström's 9 Stages of Newborn Behavior offer an opportunity to evaluate a baby in the natural, expected and optimal habitat. Intrapartum drugs, including fentanyl administered via epidural and synthetic oxytocin (synOT), have been studied in relation to neonatal outcomes with conflicting results. Determine the effects of common intrapartum medications on the instinctive behavior of healthy newborns during the first hour after birth through a prospective cohort study. Video record newly-born term infants during the first hour after birth while in skin-to-skin contact with mother. Code and analyze videos using Widström's 9 Stages; compare with the labor medications mothers received. Convenience sample of sixty-three low-income mothers self-selected to labor with or without intrapartum analgesia. Duration of time infants spend in each of Widström's 9 Stages for four cohorts: 1) exposed to no synOT or epidural fentanyl during labor, 2) exposed to fentanyl (but not synOT), 3) exposed synOT (but not fentanyl), 4) exposed to both fentanyl and synOT. A strong inverse correlation was found between intrapartum exposure to fentanyl and synOT and the normal behavior of an infant, as measured by time in each Stage. Intrapartum exposure to the drugs fentanyl and synOT is associated with altered newborn infant behavior, including suckling, while in skin-to-skin contact with mother during the first hour after birth. Widström's 9 Stages offer an opportunity to analyze newborn behavior whilst in the optimal habitat of the infant.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2019.03.019
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identifier ISSN: 0378-3782
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source Elsevier
subjects Adult
Anesthesia, Obstetrical - adverse effects
Anesthesia, Obstetrical - methods
Anesthetics, Intravenous - administration & dosage
Anesthetics, Intravenous - adverse effects
Crying
Epidural
Female
Fentanyl - administration & dosage
Fentanyl - adverse effects
Humans
Infant Behavior - drug effects
Infant, Newborn
Labor medications
Male
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Movement
Newborn behavior
Oxytocin - administration & dosage
Oxytocin - adverse effects
Skin-to-skin
Sleep
Sucking Behavior
Synthetic oxytocin
Widström's 9 stages
title The effect of labor medications on normal newborn behavior in the first hour after birth: A prospective cohort study
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