ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Maternal Involvement in Pain Management in NICU

I

Institute of Hospitalization and Scientific Care (IRCCS)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Infant, Newborn
Mother-Infant Interaction
Stress, Physiological
Procedural Pain

Treatments

Other: Standard care group
Other: Intervention group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04883944
Co.Ma.Do./2021

Details and patient eligibility

About

Infants admitted to Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) may experience a negative impact due to multiple painful and stressful procedures during their hospitalization. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that healthcare facilities taking care of newborns should implement pain prevention and management programs.

There are some non-pharmacological techniques that have been developed to reduce newborn's pain perception, including swaddling, holding, non-nutritive sucking in infants with Post-menstrual age (PMA) below 32 weeks, nutritional sucking with the administration of breast milk or sweeteners above 32 weeks PMA and exposure to maternal voice.

Even for parents, the experience of NICU hospitalization of their child is a particularly stressful event, mainly characterized by feelings of exclusion due to lack of interactions with their own baby due to their clinical conditions.

Hence, it is very important to intervene as soon as possible on parental stress that can affect the physical and psychological quality of life of the family. This is possible through the application of nursing care plans that involve the parents in daily care and support them in the long process of development and acquisition of autonomy and skills.

The nurse is a healthcare provider who has the most frequent contact with newborns hospitalized in NICU and has a key role in preventing, recognizing, and managing newborn's pain. However, there is a considerable discrepancy between the theory and practice: many nurses and doctors are aware that most of the procedures carried out in NICU cause pain.

Therefore, nurses also can develop high levels of physical and psychological stress, particularly when they manage a newborn who feels pain.

The purpose of this study is to evaluate if maternal involvement in the pain management of newborn admitted to NICU may reduce the level of pain perceived by infant during the heel stick procedure using the Premature Infant Pain Profile (PIPP) pain scoring tool. In addition, the study's secondary goal will be to investigate if maternal involvement in pain management of newborn may produce positive effects on the mother in reducing stress, depression and anxiety and in reducing nurses' physical and psychological stress.

Full description

This study is a prospective, randomized controlled trial with a 2x2 crossover design. Study population include newborns admitted to NICU that require a heel stick procedure after the first week of life, mothers of enrolled infants and nurses performing the heel stick procedure. The sample size will be 50 newborns who meet the inclusion criteria. Newborns will be randomly assigned to receive: i) a heel stick procedure with maternal involvement and after a week an heel stick procedure without maternal involvement or ii) a procedure without maternal involvement and after a week a procedure with maternal involvement. For both group the washout period between the two procedures is 7 days.

Before the intervention with the maternal involvement, mother will receive a training regarding the heel stick procedure and pain management.

Research hypothesis:

H1. Newborns receiving the intervention with the maternal involvement during the heel stick procedure have lower pain level than those who receive the intervention without the maternal involvement.

H2. Mothers who are involved in their baby pain management during the heel stick procedure have lower level of stress, anxiety and depression than those who are not involved during the painful procedure.

H3. Nurses have a positive effect in term of reducing stress level if mother is involved in pain management of own baby.

PIPP (Premature Infant Pain Profile) scale will be used to evaluate the pain response during the heel stick procedure. The level of stress, anxiety and depression of mother and the stress level of nurse will be assessed with validated questionnaires.

Enrollment

50 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 week to 1 month old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

For infants:

  • Infants born ≥ 23 weeks of gestational age who require an heel stick procedure, after the first week of life

For mothers:

  • Mothers' age over 18 years and good comprehension of Italian language

For nurses:

  • Nurses or pediatric nurses with professional experience in NICU ≥ 6 months who decide to participate at the study

Exclusion criteria

For infants:

  • Enteral and/or parenteral sedation/analgesia ongoing or suspended less than 4 hours from the beginning of the procedure
  • Infants who receive multiple painful procedures at the same time

For mothers:

  • bad comprehension of Italian language
  • age under 18 years

For nurses:

  • Nurses and pediatric nurses with professional experience in NICU ≤ 6 months
  • Nurses and pediatric nurses who don't give consent to study participation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

50 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
All the enrolled infants will receive the heel stick procedure with the maternal involvement after mother will be trained on the application of the non-pharmacological techniques during the performance of the procedure.
Treatment:
Other: Intervention group
Standard care
Active Comparator group
Description:
All the enrolled infants will receive the heel stick procedure according to local protocol without the maternal involvement. The non-pharmacological techniques will be performed by a second nurse not involved in the heel stick procedure itself.
Treatment:
Other: Standard care group

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems