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Narrative Nursing for Cesarean Mothers' Anxiety and Breastfeeding Confidence (NARRCARE)

X

Xi Huang

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Cesarean Section Wound
Postpartum Anxiety
Postpartum Depression (PPD)
Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy

Treatments

Behavioral: 4-step narrative nursing program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07272252
XMUNARRCARE2025
XMSHLXH2320 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
Basic Nursing II (Other Grant/Funding Number)
FJ2022B061 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study tests whether a nurse-led "4-step narrative nursing" program can reduce anxiety and improve breastfeeding confidence in mothers who are having a planned or non-emergency cesarean section.

What is the problem? About 30-40% of Chinese cesarean mothers feel high anxiety after surgery, and 1 in 5 is at risk for postpartum depression. Low confidence in breastfeeding is also common.

What will we do?

We will randomly assign 160 mothers (1:1) to either:

Usual care - standard education and ward care, or

Usual care plus narrative nursing - four short (10-20 min) conversations with a trained nurse:

Before surgery - help the mother talk about her fears. 24-48 h after surgery - encourage her to "name" pain or worries and separate them from herself.

Before discharge - guide her to find positive moments and build a "strong-mom" story.

Two weeks later by phone - strengthen the new story and review feeding success. What will we measure? Main result: anxiety score at 48 h (STAI scale). Other results: depression risk, breastfeeding confidence, pain, and feeding rates up to 3 months.

Possible benefits:

Lower anxiety, better mood, higher breastfeeding rates. No drugs or extra procedures are involved, only talking.

Risks:

Minimal; some mothers may feel emotional during conversations, but nurses can pause or refer to counselling if needed.

Enrollment

160 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Women aged 18-50 years
  2. Scheduled for elective or non-emergency cesarean section at ≥37 weeks
  3. Able to communicate in Mandarin and provide written informed consent
  4. Expected hospital stay ≥24 h
  5. Singleton pregnancy with stable maternal and neonatal condition allowing routine mother-baby contact

Exclusion criteria

  1. Severe psychiatric disorders (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, active suicidal ideation)
  2. Maternal or neonatal need for ICU/NICU admission
  3. Emergency cesarean section preventing baseline assessment
  4. Communication or cognitive impairment precluding interview

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

160 participants in 2 patient groups

Routine perinatal care
No Intervention group
Description:
Participants receive standard ward education, nursing care, discharge instructions, and routine telephone follow-up without any additional narrative sessions.
4-step narrative nursing
Experimental group
Description:
Participants receive usual care plus four nurse-led narrative sessions (pre-op externalization, post-op deconstruction, pre-discharge reconstruction, and 2-week meaning-reconstruction phone call) aimed at reducing anxiety and enhancing breastfeeding confidence.
Treatment:
Behavioral: 4-step narrative nursing program

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Yinchun Tan; X i Huang

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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