ABSTRACT
Background
Birth before term is a stressful experience for parents because of the unexpected delivery or admission to the neonatal intensive care unit.
Objective
This research aimed to evaluate the impact of the early PT intervention on preterm infants’ parents’ experiences, and also to obtain knowledge about parents’ experiences and perceived difficulties during preterm infants’ care.
Methods
This qualitative study is based on the methods of phenomenology. In the first phase, open interviews were developed to allow researchers to immerse themselves in the context of the study and refine the questions for the semi-structured interviews. Data collected from the semi-structured interviews were analyzed through content analysis.
Results
The results were summarized around three themes: 1) parental competence; 2) difficulties during preterm infants’ care; and 3) coping strategies. Each theme was divided into two sub-themes.
Conclusion
Mothers and fathers of preterm infants experienced difficulties when caring for their babies. Parents that received the early physiotherapy intervention felt empowered to take care of their babies and to enhance infants’ development. These parents were more capable of developing coping strategies after the intervention. Parents that did not receive the early physiotherapy intervention expressed difficulties when caring for their preterm babies.
Acknowledgments
The authors acknowledge and thank to Dr. Gunn Kristin Øberg, Dr. Olga Canet Vélez, and Dr. Natàlia Gómara-Toldrà for their comments on an earlier draft of this research, to families who participated in the study, and to The Catalan Board of Physical Therapists for funding. We are grateful to the editor and the reviewers for their comments on this manuscript. With the support of a predoctoral grant in physiotherapy from the University of Vic - Central University of Catalonia.
Disclosure statement
The authors report no conflict of interest.