1.Nursing Frequency, Nursing Time, and Nursing Intervention Priorities depending on Neonatal Therapeutic Hypothermia Methods.
Dong Yeon KIM ; Kyung A JO ; Bo Ram YI ; Ho Ran PARK
Child Health Nursing Research 2018;24(4):517-526
PURPOSE: This study compared nursing frequency, nursing time, and nursing intervention priorities depending on the method of neonatal induced hypothermia. METHODS: We observed 15 neonatal subjects receiving therapeutic hypothermia for 3 days each. Forty-five nurses experienced with nursing neonatal patients under therapeutic hypothermia provided responses about nursing intervention priorities. Analyses with the chi-square, the Fisher exact test, the paired t-test, the Wilcoxon signed rank test, and the Wilcoxon rank-sum test were performed on the data using SAS version 9.4. RESULTS: The frequency of nursing activities was higher for selective head therapeutic hypothermia (SHTH) than for systemic therapeutic hypothermia (STH), and nursing time was also significantly longer. In terms of nursing intervention priorities, there were priority differences in “risk for ineffective thermoregulation” and “risks for impaired skin integrity” for SHTH compared to STH . CONCLUSION: Since SHTH for neonatal therapeutic hypothermia requires more nursing time and frequent nursing activities than STH, STH is therefore recommended if the therapeutic efficacy is similar. Appropriate nursing personnel should be allocated for neonatal SHTH nursing. Nurses should be aware of nursing interventions for therapeutic hypothermia as the priorities are different for different methods of neonatal therapeutic hypothermia.
Head
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Humans
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Hypothermia
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Hypothermia, Induced*
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Methods*
;
Neonatal Nursing
;
Nursing*
;
Skin
2.A Mother's Experience of Hospitalization of Her Newborn in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
Child Health Nursing Research 2018;24(4):407-419
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to explore and describe the meaning and essence of a mother's experience of hospitalization of her newborn in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). METHODS: This study employed a qualitative research design. An interview was conducted with a mother whose newborn was hospitalized in the NICU, and the data were analyzed using Giorgi's phenomenological method. RESULTS: Five main themes and 19 formulated meanings were indentified. The 5 themes were ‘drowning in pain’, ‘just look outside the glass door’, ‘being a pillar’, ‘a deepening attachment’, and ‘prepare for nurturing with hope’. CONCLUSION: The results of this study provided an in-depth understanding of the experience of a mother with a newborn in the NICU. These results can be used in the development of a nursing intervention program that provides psychological and emotional support to the mother and family.
Glass
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Hospitalization*
;
Humans
;
Infant, Newborn*
;
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
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Intensive Care, Neonatal*
;
Methods
;
Mothers
;
Nursing
;
Qualitative Research
3.Yakson vs. GHT Therapy Effects on Growth and Physical Response of Preterm Infants and on Maternal Attachment.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(2):255-264
PURPOSE: This study is aimed to confirm the effects of Yakson therapy on the growth and physical response of preterm infants, and maternal attachment to them compared with GHT therapy. METHOD: The design of this study is nonequivalent control group with repeated measuring by quasi experimental study. The subjects are preterm infants in 26 - 34 gestational age hospitalized in the NICU of 4 university hospitals with an experimental group of 15 and a control group of 14. Yakson therapy consists of three phases: laying a hand, caressing by hand, and laying a hand again taking 5 minutes for each phase. RESULT: As a result of administering Yakson therapy to preterm infants; the average weight gain of the Yakson group was higher than that of the GHT group, but there is no significant difference between groups. The oxygen saturation and maternal attachment difference between the Yakson and the GHT group were not significant. Significant differences in the average daily increase of oral intake and apical pulse rate were observed between the Yakson group and GHT group. CONCLUSION: These data suggested that Yakson therapy may be an effective nursing intervention which can facilitate growth and physical response of preterm infants.
Child Development
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Female
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Humans
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Infant, Premature/*growth & development/physiology
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Intensive Care, Neonatal/*methods
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Male
;
Mother-Child Relations
;
Neonatal Nursing/*methods
;
Pregnancy
;
Therapeutic Touch/*methods
4.Pain Relieving Effect of Yakson Therapy for Infants.
Eun Sook PARK ; Kyung Suk SUNG ; Won Oak OH ; Hye Sang IM ; Eun Sook KIM ; Yeon Ah KIM ; Chun Hee LEE
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(6):897-904
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to identify the effects of Yakson therapy as a pain management tool on the physiologic and behavioral reponses of infants with a painful heelstick procedure. METHOD: Infants were randomly assigned to a group that underwent a series of Yakson therapy and a control that received nothingbefore a heelstick. Heart rate, oxygen saturation, and NIPS were compared between the experimental (n=16) and control (n=16) infants during an undisturbed baseline and after a standard heelstick procedure. Yakson therapy consisted of laying a hand on the back, and caressing the abdomen by hand for 5 minutes. RESULT: The pain scores of the Yakson group were lower than the control group. Foroxygen saturation, there were statistically significant differences between groups. For heart rate, there were no statistically significant differences between groups. CONCLUSION: This data suggests that Yakson therapy had a pain relief effect in behavior responses and SaO2. Accordingly, Yakson therapy should be used as a nursing intervention for simple pain management for a heel prick.
Blood Specimen Collection
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Female
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Heart Rate
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Heel
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Humans
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Infant, Newborn
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Male
;
*Neonatal Nursing
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Oximetry
;
Pain/nursing/*therapy
;
Pain Measurement
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Punctures/adverse effects
;
Therapeutic Touch/*methods/nursing
5.A brief introduction to NICU management in Canada.
Xiao-lan ZHANG ; Shoo kim LEE ; Ling-qing HU ; Qin ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2013;51(12):951-953
Breast Feeding
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Canada
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Caregivers
;
education
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Child
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Cross Infection
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prevention & control
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Feeding Behavior
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Humans
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Infant, Newborn
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Infant, Premature
;
Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
;
organization & administration
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Intensive Care, Neonatal
;
methods
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Neonatal Nursing
;
methods
;
Parents
;
education
;
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
6.Perceptions on Pain Management among Korean Nurses in Neonatal Intensive Care Units.
Ihn Sook JEONG ; Soon Mi PARK ; Jeon Ma LEE ; Yoon Jin CHOI ; Joohyun LEE
Asian Nursing Research 2014;8(4):261-266
PURPOSE: The present survey was conducted to investigate the perceptions among nurses of neonatal pain and the associated use of pharmacologic measures (PMs) and nonpharmacologic comfort measures (CMs) in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). Pain perception, the necessity and actual use of PMs and CMs, and their relationships were investigated and compared according to nurses' positions, educational levels, the existence of guidelines, and prior education on neonatal pain management. METHODS: Participants were 141 nurses from five NICUs at university hospitals. A questionnaire was developed by researchers based on previous studies of neonatal pain management and current practices in surveyed NICUs. Five-point Likert scales were used to assess nurses' perceptions of pain, the necessity of PMs and CMs, and their actual use in 29 painful procedures. RESULTS: The mean scores of perceived pain and the necessity of PMs and CMs were 3.68, 2.96, and 3.79 points, respectively. The actual use of PMs and CMs was 1.67 and 2.63 points, respectively. The perceived necessity of PMs correlated with the actual use of PMs (r = .316, p < .001), and CMs were performed (r = .390, p < .001). Keeping or reading guidelines, or receiving education on pain management resulted in a higher perception of the necessity of PMs. CONCLUSION: Korean nurses in NICUs often underestimate the necessity of pain relief measures and use few PMs or CMs. Therefore, systematic approaches to implement guidelines, such as adaptation of guidelines for each NICU, dissemination of guideline content to all NICU staff, and regular measurements of compliance with the guidelines, are recommended.
Adult
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*Attitude of Health Personnel
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Female
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Humans
;
Infant, Newborn
;
*Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
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Intensive Care, Neonatal/*methods
;
Nursing Staff, Hospital/*psychology
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Pain/nursing
;
Pain Management/*methods/psychology/*utilization
;
Questionnaires
;
Republic of Korea
;
Young Adult
7.Effects of Kangaroo Care on Anxiety, Maternal Role Confidence, and Maternal Infant Attachment of Mothers who Delivered Preterm Infants.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2007;37(6):949-956
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of Kangaroo Care(KC) on anxiety, maternal role confidence, and maternal infant attachment of mothers who delivered preterm infants. METHODS: The research design was a nonequivalent control group pretest-posttest. Data was collected from September 1. 2006 to June 20. 2007. The participants were 22 mothers in the experimental group and 21 in the control group. KC was applied three times per day, for a total of ten times in 4 days to the experimental group. RESULTS: The degree of anxiety was statistically significantly different between the two groups but maternal role confidence and maternal infant attachment was statistically insignificant. CONCLUSION: This data suggests that KC was effective for mothers anxiety relief but it was not effective for maternal role confidence and maternal infant attachment of mothers. The implications for nursing practice and directions for future research need to be discussed.
Adult
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*Anxiety
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Female
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Humans
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Infant Care/*methods
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Infant, Newborn
;
Infant, Premature/*psychology
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Maternal Behavior/psychology
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Mother-Child Relations
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Mothers/*psychology
;
Neonatal Nursing
8.The Effect of Oral Glucose on Pain Relief in Newborns.
Hye Young AHN ; Me Young JANG ; Myung Haeng HUR
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2006;36(6):992-1001
PURPOSE: This study was done to provide data for a nursing intervention to alleviate newborn pain clinically by investigating the effect of oral glucose. METHODS: Subjects were newborns hospitalized in the nursery. Informed consent was obtained from parents of 60 newborns. A heel stick was carried out for a test on 3 groups; the experimental, placebo, and control group. The Neonatal infant pain scale(NIPS), respiration rate, heart rate, peripheral oxygen partial pressure(SpO2), and crying duration were measured to assess pain reaction. All neonatal behaviors were recorded on videotape. RESULTS: There were significant differences in pain behavior during stimulus(F=4.195, p=.020), pain behavior immediately after blood-sampling (F=4.114, p=.021), and pain behavior 3 minutes after that (F=3.630, p=.033). However, there were no significant differences in heart rate, respiration rate, peripheral oxygen partial pressure or crying duration after the heel stick among the groups. CONCLUSIONS: Oral administration of glucose before a heel stick caused the reduction of neonatal pain behavior, which means that it has an effect of pain relief.
Administration, Oral
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Blood Specimen Collection
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Female
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Glucose/administration & dosage/*therapeutic use
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Heart Rate
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Heel
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Humans
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Infant, Newborn
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Male
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Neonatal Nursing/*methods
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Oximetry
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Pain/nursing/*prevention & control
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Pain Measurement
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Placebos
;
Punctures/adverse effects
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Respiration
;
Time Factors
9.Bedside diode laser photocoagulation for 103 cases with serious retinopathy of prematurity in NICU.
Qiu-ping LI ; Zong-hua WANG ; Sheng ZHANG ; Ying CHEN ; Jia CHEN ; Jun-jin HUANG ; Zi-zhen WANG ; Yan KE ; Zhi-chun FENG
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2013;51(1):12-15
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the efficacy and safety of the bedside diode laser photocoagulation for severe retinopathy of prematurity in neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
METHODData of 103 patients with prethreshold or threshold retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), treated with diode laser photoablation after vecuronium-induced anesthesia and mechanical ventilation from March 2009 to July 2011 in NICU of Bayi Children's Hospital.
RESULTTotally 199 eyes in 103 patients received laser therapy with at least 5 months follow up. Among these eyes, zone I disease was found in 76 eyes (38.2%) of 39 infants, zone II disease was found in 123 eyes (61.8%)of 64 infants and additional disease was found in 180 eyes of 91 infants. After treatment 191 (96.0%) of 199 eyes had favorable outcomes and 8 developed to partial retinal detachment. The rate of favorable outcomes in zone I diseases and zone 2 diseases were 89.5% and 100% respectively. The laser therapy was undertaken in all patients safely and the use of ventilator was stopped quickly [after a mean of (6.7 ± 1.3) h].
CONCLUSIONBedside laser photocoagulation in NICU is a safe and effective treatment mode for severe ROP and should be used widely.
Anesthesia ; methods ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Gestational Age ; Humans ; Infant ; Infant, Low Birth Weight ; Infant, Newborn ; Infant, Premature ; Intensive Care Units, Neonatal ; Lasers, Semiconductor ; Light Coagulation ; methods ; Male ; Perioperative Nursing ; Retina ; pathology ; surgery ; Retinopathy of Prematurity ; pathology ; surgery ; Retrospective Studies ; Severity of Illness Index ; Treatment Outcome
10.A Study on the Perceived Stress of Mothers in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
Korean Journal of Child Health Nursing 1998;4(1):60-75
The parents have much expectation upon the pregnancy and child birth, and in most cases, they expect the healthy parturient child. However, we can be placed on the high-risk conditions which have the physical, social and immature infant, due to the unexpected results, among the new-born. Accordingly, these high-risk newborn and premature infants will be mostly in NICU, which the concentrated medical treatment can be given, upon their conditions. After their birth and during these periods, they will be divided from the parents, and the nurse will accomplish the bringing-up activities which they can take care of the infant, expected by the parents after their birth. The hospitalization of high-risk newborn including these premature infants is the shocking experience to the parents of family, and thus they can feel the fear and uneasiness, and these reactions of parents are troubled in the behavior at the usual days, and cause the disorder and spiritless status, and these results break the supporting ability of parents, and cause the obstruction. Also, the unavoidable division between the parents and the children as like hospitalization of children can make the parents to feel the alienation emotionally, and this causes the results which the pride on the bringing-up ability of baby gets to be lost. These problems can cause the difficulties on the bonding or the parenting in the further days, and can be related to the neglect and abuse of children. Also, it is gradually increased to study and report which the emotional division by the physical division between the mother and the baby obstructs the normal affection course between the parent and the infant. The stress caused by the birth and the hospitalization of high-risk newborn, as like this, is important in the points which it can uncertainly affect the potential energy for the relationship of parent-child who are finally healthy. Accordingly, the significance and purpose of this study are to understand the contents and degree of stress which the parents of high-risk newborn including the immature child can be experienced from the hospitalization of ICU for their new borns, and thus to offer the basic program to the nursing intervention program for these. The subject of this study is the mother of newborn in NICU of 10 General Hospitals located at the zone of Pusan, Korea from September 1997 to October 1997, and thus makes the subject of 95 person of parents who agreed to take part in the study and it is descriptive study related to the stress of mother having the newborn in NICU. The method is based on the preceding study related to the stress of mother having the experience of child hospitalization and chronic disease child, and then acquires the advice of specialists group as like 5 nursing professors, and then is amended and supplemented. Total number of questions in 43 items and consists of 5 factors as like medical treatment&nursing procedures, disease status&prognosis, role of parents, communication&inter-personal relationships, hospital environment, and is 5 point Likert Scale. The reliability of this study method is very highly shown to be Cronbach alpha=0.95. The collected data is analysed as Average, Frequency, Standard Deviation, T-test, ANOVA, Pearson Correlation Coefficient, Duncan multiful-range test by use of SPSS/PC (V7.5). The results of this study is summarized as under : 1. Every characteristics of subject is which the party of mother is 28.70age(+/-7.48) in the average ages, 51% in the high-school graduate, 38.5% in the christianity, total monthly income is 212.55 thousand won(+/-1.971), 74.5% in the housewife, 72.9% in the parents and children together living and the number of children to be 1.48 person(+/-0.6) in average, the recognition on the prognosis of baby is 74.0% in "Don't know", the relationship with the husband after the hospitalization of baby is 37.3% in "More Intimate", the relationship with the family of husband to be 48% in "No-change", and the degree which is consulted with the husband about the baby is 55% in "very frequently" and the visiting number per week is 4.59(+/-1.63) in average and the accompanying person in the time of visiting is which is which the number of husband is 56.3% and thus is the highest. The characteristics of baby is which the age is 21. 88days(+/-16.47) after the birth in average, the sex to be 50 person in the female 52.1% and the order of birth to be 54.2% in the first child, and the weight in the birth to be 2770gm(+/-610) and the height in the birth to be 46.26cm(+/-7.62) in average. The medical diagnosis is 37.5% in the premature infant, the career of hospitalization is 96.9% in "None", and the operation plan is 90.6% in "None" and the execution of operation is 88% in "None" and the nursing of incubator is 55.2% in "Yes", and the method of feeding is 50.5% in "Oral" and the contents of feeding is 46.9% in the "Milk". 2. The total stress degree of subject is almost highly shown to be as 3.36(+/-0.86). If it is compared upon each cause, 'stress on disease status&prognosis' is highest 3.79(+/-1.28), and it is in the order of 'stress on medical treatment&nursing procedures' 3.70(+/--.93), 'stress on hospital environment' 3.14(+/-0.86), 'stress on role of parents' 3.18(+/-0.92) and 'stress on communication&inter personal relationship' 2.62(+/-0.77). 3. As the results of checking the notworthiness of stress degree upon each variable of subject, the variable showing the noted difference was the birth weight)gamma=-0.16, P=0.04), birth height(gamma=-0.23, P=0.03), nursing in the incubator(F=8.93, P=0.04), feed method(F=2.94, P=0.04). That is to say, it is shown which the smaller the birth weight is, the higher the stress degree of mother is noteworthily. Also, the smaller the birth weight is, the higher the stress degree of mother is noteworthily. Also, the smaller the birth height baby is, the higher the stress of mother is. In the incubator, it is shown which the mother whose baby is nursing in the incubator is higher in the stress degree than other mothers. Upon the feeding method of baby, that is to say, TPN is the highest, and it is shown in the order of NPO, Tube feeding, and P.O. feeding. When we review the above-mentioned results, as the status is serious, it is thought which we include the supporting nursing for coping with the stress of parents in the setting-up od nursing plan for the baby in the NICU.
Birth Weight
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Busan
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Child
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Christianity
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Chronic Disease
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Diagnosis
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Emigrants and Immigrants
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Enteral Nutrition
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Feeding Methods
;
Female
;
Hospitalization
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Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Incubators
;
Infant
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Infant, Premature
;
Intensive Care, Neonatal*
;
Korea
;
Mothers*
;
Nursing
;
Parenting
;
Parents
;
Parturition
;
Pregnancy
;
Prognosis
;
Shock
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Specialization
;
Spouses
;
Child Health