ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Training Parenting Self-efficacy in Parents of Hospitalized Preterm Neonates (CAP-PREM)

H

Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañon

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Parenting
Preterm Infants
Training Support

Treatments

Behavioral: Training program CAP-PREM

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02803866
CCF-Padres 01

Details and patient eligibility

About

In a hospital environment, initial parenting of a family with a preterm neonate will be very different than expected. This unusual and stressful situation may determine the self-confidence perceived by mothers and fathers in caring their baby and therefore could shape future interaction with him/her as well as neurodevelopmental and behavioral development of preterm infants.

24/7 neonatal units allow parents stay with their baby whenever they want but this free access nor guarantee neither encourage parenting self-efficacy if it isn't hand in hand with a specific training program for parents.

Full description

Longitudinal, prospective, analytic cohort study of parents of preterm newborns who will receive a specific training program for caring their preterm newborns during hospitalization. Families will be recruited during the first 10 days of hospitalization. The PMP S-E (Perceived Maternal Parenting Self- Efficacy) tool developed by Barnes and Adamson-Macedo, will be used to measure self-efficacy in providing infant care by mother or both mother and father. The training program will be developed at bed side by nurses and neonatologist covering theoretical and practical sessions during the first 25 days of hospitalization.

Hypothesis principal: Parents of hospitalized preterm neonates will get better score after application of a specific training program (CAP-PREM).

Secondary hypothesis:

  • There is a correlation between the level of stress and anxiety in parents at admission and discharge and the results of PMP S-E score after the CAP-PREM program
  • To assess those selected demographic variables that can predict a better result in PMP S-E score after the CAP-PREM program

Enrollment

16 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 to 15 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Preterm infants between 25 and 32 weeks of gestation,
  • parents stay at the unit for at least 8 hours/day during training program
  • fluent Spanish.
  • parents age > 18 years
  • No clinical instability, invasive mechanical ventilation, intraventricular hemorrhage >II or necrotizing enterocolitis .
  • no congenital malformation nor chromosomal abnormalities

Exclusion criteria :

  • No possibility of survival beyond the first week of life
  • Admission less than 4 weeks
  • No collaboration / lack of parental compliance
  • wish of parents to leave the study

Trial design

16 participants in 1 patient group

Parents of preterm newborns (25-32 weeks of gestation)
Description:
Parents (mother or mother+father) of preterm newborns admitted at the Gregorio Marañón Hospital from birth, recruited during the first 10 days of preterm newborn hospitalization and receiving the training program CAP-PREM
Treatment:
Behavioral: Training program CAP-PREM

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Sylvia Caballero, PhD; Sylvia Caballero, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems