ABSTRACT
In recent years, there has been an increase in the use of apps that support the transition to parenthood. Research on the experiences of parents of premature children who have returned home from hospital points to the need for ongoing support as they navigate the transition to parenthood without the support of neonatal intensive care staff. For parents of premature infants, these platforms can act as wellsprings of information and also provide emotional and instrumental support during extended periods of hospitalisation. We used the walk-through method to analyse the support content and self-tracking features of five market-leading apps aimed at new parents of premature infants. This content analysis revealed that none of the analysed apps featured ongoing support for parents once they have returned home with their infants. Further analysis of the sociocultural dimensions of the digital content revealed the implicit reinforcement of the gendered expectations of parenthood and heteronormative nuclear families, thereby suggesting that women must enact the majority of caregiving and implicitly excluding users from same-sex or single-parent families. This research illuminates the need for more inclusive and gender-neutral app design and content that can offer ongoing digital support to parents of premature infants who have returned home from hospital.
Acknowledgements
Thank you to Professor Simone Taffe, Associate Professor Kay Cook, and Dr Cesar Albarran-Torres for their invaluable feedback on drafts on this paper.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Adrienne Byrt
Adrienne Byrt is an interdisciplinary Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology and Design at Swinburne University of Technology [email: [email protected]].
Deborah Dempsey
Deborah Dempsey, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in Sociology in the School of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities at Swinburne University of Technology [email: [email protected]].