Skin-to-Skin Contact and the Incidence of Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn

2021 
Abstract Objectives To compare the incidence of transient tachypnea of the newborn (TTN) before and after the implementation of a Baby-Friendly protocol and to determine changes in the rates of TTN symptoms, interventions, completion of skin-to-skin contact. Design Retrospective cohort study using data in the electronic medical record. Setting Community-based tertiary obstetric facility. Participants We reviewed 934 charts of neonates born at or greater than 34 weeks gestation to women ages 18 years or older and included 790 neonates: 491 in the preimplementation group and 299 in the postimplementation group. Group assignment was based on time of Baby-Friendly protocol implementation. The preimplementation group included neonates born in April, August, and December of 2014, and the postimplementation group included neonates born during these months in 2018. Methods The primary outcome was incidence of TTN. Secondary outcomes were rates of the following: tachypnea symptoms, hypoglycemia, antibiotic administration, and completion of skin-to-skin contact. Results The incidence of TTN was 2% (n = 8/491) in the preimplementation group and 1% (n = 4/299) in the postimplementation group (p = 1.000). The rate of tachypnea symptoms decreased from 5% (n = 25/491) to 1% (n = 3/299, p = .003), the rate of hypoglycemia decreased from 11% (n = 54/491) to 3% (n = 10/299, p  Conclusion Although skin-to-skin contact facilitates physiologic transition to extrauterine life, incidence of TTN was not significantly reduced after the implementation of the Baby-Friendly protocol. However, increased practice of skin-to-skin contact was an improvement in care with implications for the transition to extrauterine life.
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