Child Health Nurs Res.  2014 Jul;20(3):185-195.

Effects of Hearing Recorded Mother's Voice on Physiological Reactions and Behavioral State of Sleep, Weight of Very Low Birth Weight Infants

Affiliations
  • 1College of Nursing, Pusan National University, Busan, Korea. nursing@pusan.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
The purpose of this study was to identify whether hearing a recording of mother's voice affected physiological reactions, behavioral state related to sleep and weight of very low birth weight (VLBW) infants.
METHODS
This was a nonequivalent control group pre-post test quasi-experimental design. The participants were 11 VLBW infants in the experimental group and 11 in the control group. In the experimental group, a recording of mother's voice was played to her infant by voice recorder four times each day for five minutes over 10 consecutive days in the incubator.
RESULTS
For physiological response (heart rate, respiration rate, oxygen saturation), there were statistically significant differences between the experimental and control groups. Behavioral state during sleep was more very quiet and quiet in the experimental group. In the daily weight change, there was no significant difference between the experimental and control groups.
CONCLUSION
The findings suggest that, for VLBW infants, the intervention of hearing a recording of mother's voice had some significance as a nursing intervention having a positive impact. Such interventions can help pediatric nurses to stabilize the physiological response and maintenance more very quiet sleep state and improve VLBW infants' growth.

Keyword

Mother; Voice; Infant; Very low birth weight; Body weight; Mother-Child relations

MeSH Terms

Body Weight
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Hearing*
Humans
Incubators
Infant*
Infant, Very Low Birth Weight*
Mother-Child Relations
Mothers
Nursing
Oxygen
Respiratory Rate
Voice*
Oxygen
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