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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.
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160 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Yinchun Tan; X i Huang
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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