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The Effect of Heating With Electrical Blanket After Cesarean Section on the Postpartum

T

T.C. ORDU ÜNİVERSİTESİ

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Cesarean Section

Treatments

Other: electric blankets

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06262243
ORDUU-HEM-TÇ-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

It is known that maintaining and maintaining normal body temperature in women after cesarean section facilitates the mother's adaptation to the postpartum period. One of the important problems after cesarean section is hypothermia. Therefore, various methods are used to maintain normal body temperature. One of these methods is the use of electric blankets. This study will investigate the effect of using electric blankets after cesarean section on postpartum comfort, pain, milk quantity and breastfeeding success.

Full description

After cesarean section, mothers face more problems than mothers who give birth normally. Post-cesarean pain, breastfeeding problems, anesthesia-related side effects, and postpartum complications are important reasons affecting maternal comfort. After a cesarean section, mothers may experience hypothermia due to the low temperature in the operating room, the incision, and the effects of spinal/general anesthesia. In mothers who develop hypothermia after cesarean section, undesirable results may occur in physiological parameters such as fever, pulse, blood pressure, pain, and intestinal motility. Therefore, body temperature, blood pressure, pulse, saturation, pain, time to first flatus and defecation are the main factors that determine patient comfort after surgery. In the postoperative period, both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment methods are used to reduce pain, increase the amount of milk, and increase intestinal motility. It is stated in the literature that non-pharmacological methods such as early mobilization, chewing gum, early oral hydration (consumption of water, warm water, tea, coffee), and hot application are effective in increasing intestinal motility. Using active and passive heating methods to prevent hypothermia after cesarean section are practices that affect postpartum comfort. With this study, it is expected that heating with an electric blanket will prevent hypothermia, increase postpartum comfort, reduce pain, and increase breastfeeding success by affecting the amount of milk.

Enrollment

78 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years and over,
  • At least primary school graduate
  • The one who is married
  • Primiparous women who gave birth at term,
  • Having the baby with her after birth
  • Those who agreed to participate in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Those who gave birth at less than 37 weeks of gestation
  • Mothers with babies weighing less than 2500 grams
  • The newborn has a congenital anomaly,
  • Those with a history of high-risk pregnancy
  • Those who received any food, including water, other than breast milk until the 10th day of follow-up
  • Those with cardiovascular disease problems, those with a history of neurological diseases
  • Mothers with nipple problems
  • Diabetes Mellitus, those diagnosed with gestational diabetes mellitus,
  • Mothers who gave birth with general anesthesia

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

78 participants in 2 patient groups

experimental group
Experimental group
Description:
The group that will receive routine care and electric blankets after cesarean section.
Treatment:
Other: electric blankets
control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The group that will receive routine care after cesarean section.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

TUBA ÇITAK; EBRU ŞAHİN

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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