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Skin-to skin contact with fathers may help newborns after caesarean delivery

01.06.21 | Wiley

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Separating infants and their mothers after a Caesarean section delivery is common. A new study published in Acta Paediatrica has found that providing skin-to-skin contact with the father may provide benefits to a newborn.

In the study, 95 newborns were randomized to cot, father's arms, or skin-to-skin contact with the father after Caesarean section delivery. Heart rates were higher and showed more stability over time in the skin-to-skin than cot or fathers' arms groups. Wakefulness was also initially higher in the skin-to-skin group.

"The skin-to-skin group showed some advantages over the cot and fathers' arms groups when it came to establishing stable physiological parameters and wakefulness. This approach should be supported during mother-infant separation," the authors wrote.

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Acta Paediatrica

10.1111/apa.15685

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Wiley Newsroom
newsroom@wiley.com

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Wiley. (2021, January 6). Skin-to skin contact with fathers may help newborns after caesarean delivery. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LQ4KNDN8/skin-to-skin-contact-with-fathers-may-help-newborns-after-caesarean-delivery.html
MLA:
"Skin-to skin contact with fathers may help newborns after caesarean delivery." Brightsurf News, Jan. 6 2021, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LQ4KNDN8/skin-to-skin-contact-with-fathers-may-help-newborns-after-caesarean-delivery.html.