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The Effect of Kangaroo Mother Care on Hearing Screening of Premature Infants |
WU Fang, DONG Baomei, CHEN Li, ZHANG Chonghua |
First-author's address: The First People's Hospital of Fuzhou, Jiangxi Province, Fuzhou 344000, China |
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Abstract Objective: To investigate the application of kangaroo mother care in premature infants with automatic auditory brainstem response (AABR). Method: A total of 60 premature infants admitted to the First People's Hospital of Fuzhou from January to September 2021 were selected. They were randomly divided into the kangaroo group (30 cases) and the routine group (30 cases). The routine group was treated with routine nursing. The kangaroo group was treated with kangaroo mother care on the basis of the routine group. The examination preparation time, environmental noise level value, detection time, completion time of AABR recording, screening pass rate and test status in the two groups were compared. Result: The time of preparation, detection, and AABR recording in the kangaroo group were significantly shorter than those in the routine group (P<0.05). There was no significant difference in the level of environmental noise between the two groups (P>0.05). The compliance and pass rate of primary screeing in the kangaroo group were significantly higher than those of the routine group, and the test status was significantly better than that of the routine group (P<0.05). Conclusion: Kangaroo mother care can help premature infants perform AABR detection efficiently and smoothly, reduce the impact of sound and light stimulation, shorten hearing screening time, and improve screening efficiency.
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Received: 12 January 2023
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