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The purpose of this study is to determine if the position of the mother in the first two hours after delivery, while she is in skin to skin contact with your child, influences the oxygen saturation and/or heart rate of the newborn. In this way it could provide some useful information for the prevention of seemingly lethal episodes or sudden death of the child when, following current recommendations is skin to skin contact in the first hours of life. These episodes are communicating in all developed countries and have caused great concern and interest in the scientific community. So far we only have information from case series.
Full description
The early skin to skin contact between mother and child in the first two hours postpartum is essential for bonding and breastfeeding. Coinciding with the widespread application of this procedure in hospitals have been described, in different countries, cases of children who have suffered episodes of apparent life threatening events (ALTEs) or early sudden deaths during the same procedure. The cause of these events is unclarified, it is unknown whether the position of the mother during the first two hours of a child's life affects their stability.
The investigators's hypothesis is that the frequency of episodes of oxygen saturation less than 91% in the first 2 hours of life of the newborn is reduced by one third in children whose mothers are incorporated at 45° above the horizontal plane of the bed compared with children whose mothers are incorporated to 15º.
This is a multicenter, randomized and controlled study in 10 Spanish hospitals with blind evaluation. 5866 participants will be enrolled in this study (a total of 1275 children are required in each arm of the study).
Mother/child (defined as a dyad) will be randomized in two groups:
Group A: head-of-bed elevated 15°. Group B: head-of-bed elevated 45°.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria pre-randomization:
Notes:
Post randomization exclusion criteria (at the end of delivery)
Related to childbirth:
Related mother:
Related Newborn (RN)
Interruption of skin contact because the mother present a problem
Notes:
(3) Sedatives or relaxants during or after birth: Pethidine (Dolantina®), scopolamine (Buscapina®), haloperidol, benzodiazepines and opiates.
(4) Clinic: general discomfort, fever, hypothermia, pallor, mottled skin (cutis marmorata), cyanosis, petechiae, purpura, lethargy, weakness, poor responsiveness, seizures, tremors, poor perfusion, maintained tachycardia, bradycardia, hypotension, apnea, tachypnea, respiratory distress (grunting, nasal flaring, intercostal or subcostal or substernal retractions, thoracoabdominal dissociation), vomiting, abdominal distesion, etc.
Clarifications:
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1,243 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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