Calgary

Preterm babies' parents integrated into care at Alberta NICUs in new research project

One in 12 babies is born prematurely in Alberta and a new research project aims to help them leave the hospital sooner, with parents who are more confident in caring for them at home.

'Family Integrated Care' study aims to send Alberta infants home sooner and trim system's $35M annual cost

Janine Charles holds her son Deegan, who was her second child to be born prematurely. (Evelyne Asselin/CBC)

One in 12 babies is born prematurely in Alberta and a new research project aims to help them leave the hospital sooner, with parents who are more confident in caring for them at home.

Through a plan dubbed "Family Integrated Care," nurses involve family members in the routine care of preterm newborns, including things like holding the tiny infants and changing their diapers.

The research team is hoping to demonstrate that babies treated in this way will be discharged from neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in less time, while parents will also be better prepared to care for their babies at home.

"Parents are often under stress and afraid to take their babies home because they aren't involved from the start with the baby's care," said Dr. Abhay Lodha, a lead researcher on the project.

"Our study will build that skill and confidence by involving the parents early on with our experienced and well-trained clinicians."

Karen Benzies, another lead researcher, said the typical length of stay for a preterm baby in a level-two NICU is 16 days and the goal is to reduce that by at least 10 per cent through the new approach.

Janine Charles was in and out of the hospital for nearly a month to help with care after her son Deegan was born prematurely, while nurses and doctors handled round-the-clock care for him.

It was the second preterm birth for Charles, who said this latest experience was easier than the first.

She thinks the new approach will be helpful for many parents.

"If this was their first time with a baby in the NICU, I think it would help them feel a lot more comfortable and certainly go home a lot more confident," she said.

The study is set to continue until March 2018, involving about 600 preterm babies at all 10 of Alberta's level-two NICU sites.

Alberta has one of the highest rates of preterm births in Canada, according to Alberta Health Services, and caring for these infants costs the province about $35 million a year.

More information about the study can be found here.