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Longitudinal Study of Music Therapy's Effectiveness for Premature Infants and Their Caregivers (LongSTEP)

N

NORCE Norwegian Research Centre AS

Status

Completed

Conditions

Preterm Birth

Treatments

Other: Standard care
Behavioral: MT during NICU
Behavioral: MT after NICU

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NETWORK

Identifiers

NCT03564184
RCN 273534

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: Preterm birth has major medical, psychological and socio-economic consequences worldwide. A recent systematic review suggests positive effects of music therapy (MT) on physiological measures of preterm infants and maternal anxiety, but methodologically rigorous studies including long-term follow-up of infant and parental outcomes are missing. Drawing upon caregivers' inherent resources, this study emphasizes caregiver involvement in MT to promote attuned, developmentally-appropriate musical interactions that may be of mutual benefit to infant and parent. This study will determine whether MT, as delivered by a qualified music therapist during neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) hospitalization and/or in home/municipal settings following discharge, is superior to standard care in improving bonding between primary caregivers and preterm infants, parent well-being and infant development.

Methods: Design: International multi-center, assessor-blind, 2x2 factorial, pragmatic randomized controlled trial. A feasibility study has been completed; ethical approval for the main trial is pending. Participants: 250 preterm infants and their parents. Intervention: MT focusing on singing specifically tailored to infant responses, will be delivered during NICU and/or during a post-discharge 6-month period. Primary outcome: Changes in mother-infant bonding until 6 months corrected age (CA), as measured by the Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire. Secondary outcomes: Mother-infant bonding at discharge and over 12 months CA; child development over 24 months; and parental depression, anxiety, and stress, and infant re-hospitalization, all over 12 months.

Discussion: This study fills a gap by measuring the long-term impact of MT for preterm infants/caregivers, and of MT beyond the hospital context. Outcomes related to highly involving parents in MT will directly inform the development of clinical practice in Scandinavia and other contexts with similar social welfare practices. By incorporating family-centered care, continuity of care, user involvement, and cultural relevance, this study can potentially contribute to improved quality of care for premature infants and their parents worldwide.

Enrollment

213 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria (infants):

  • born below 35 weeks gestational age
  • determined by medical staff to have achieved sufficient medical stability to start MT
  • likely to be hospitalized longer than 2 weeks from time of recruitment

Inclusion Criteria (parents):

  • willing to engage in at least 2 of 3 MT sessions per week during NICU and/or in 5 of 7 MT post-discharge sessions, if randomized to receive MT
  • live with reasonable commuting distance from the treating NICU
  • sufficient understanding of the respective national language(s) to answer questionnaires and participate in MT

Exclusion Criteria (parents):

  • documented mental illness or cognitive impairment that prevents them from being able to complete the study intervention or outcome assessments

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

213 participants in 4 patient groups

MT during and after NICU
Experimental group
Description:
Consists of music therapy during NICU hospitalization, and music therapy after discharge from initial NICU hospitalization, along with standard care.
Treatment:
Behavioral: MT during NICU
Behavioral: MT after NICU
Other: Standard care
MT during NICU
Experimental group
Description:
Consists of music therapy during NICU hospitalization, along with standard care.
Treatment:
Behavioral: MT during NICU
Other: Standard care
MT after NICU
Experimental group
Description:
Consists of music therapy after discharge from initial NICU hospitalization, along with standard care.
Treatment:
Behavioral: MT after NICU
Other: Standard care
No MT
Experimental group
Description:
Consists of standard care.
Treatment:
Other: Standard care

Trial contacts and locations

10

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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