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Aug13
Family friendly neonatal hospital units needed
Filed under: Breastfeeding Tops; Tagged as: neonatal units, neonatal units and parents, southmead hospital neonatal unitNo CommentsHospital baby neonatal units around the UK need redesigning to put parents at the heart of caring says campaigners .
Whilst no one would say hospital neonatal units are not good (and i’m sure there are a lot of children alive today due to the excellent care they have received within one of these units) some wards are just not geared up to deal with the parents of the children they look after, ie providing specific rooms for them and play rooms for their siblings. Of course the priority must be the babies care and nothing should be taken away from the clinical support and care for the babies but couldn’t there be just a few thought for the parents?
Taken from the BBC News website:
Family-friendly baby units urged
Skin-to-skin contact can help parents bond with their new baby
While babies are the main priority for health professionals in a neonatal unit, it is extremely important not to forget the needs of parents and the positive impact that they can have on the care of their baby too 
Parents’ needs can get overlooked as the medical needs of the babies are the main priority for staff, Bliss and the National Childbirth Trust (NCT) found.
They are asking health workers to put themselves “in the shoes” of parents.
Part of the problem, they say, is a lack of family-friendly facilities, like designated rooms on units for parents or play areas for siblings.
A survey of UK neonatal units by investigators from the University of Warwick found one in 10 units did not have a parents’ sitting room close to clinical areas where the babies were being cared for.
A quarter of units had no single rooms for babies in which families could care for their newborn while preparing for discharge home.
Few had playrooms or areas for siblings and there were also important gaps in psychosocial support services for parents.
Only half of the units had a parents’ group and only a third had a one-to-one parent support scheme.
And few had policies on proven beneficial ways to involve families in care, including opportunities for parents to have skin-to-skin contact with their newborn.
Family-friendly
Parents say they value being given consistent, clear information about the unit and caring for their baby, as well as receiving emotional advice.
Bliss chief executive Andy Cole said: “While babies are the main priority for health professionals in a neonatal unit, it is extremely important not to forget the needs of parents and the positive impact that they can have on the care of their baby too.
“This project highlights the importance of effective communication and support for families and that services both in hospital and at home should take full account of their individual needs at what can be a very uncertain and stressful time.
“Parents must feel confident and supported to provide the best possible care to their vulnerable baby.”
Professor David Field, president of the British Association of Perinatal Medicine, said: “This is a very important piece of work in highlighting the needs of parents who have a baby requiring neonatal care.
“These needs are easily forgotten when so much focus is on the baby.”
The lottery-funded POPPY Project (Parents of Premature babies Project), run by Bliss, the NCT, the Royal College of Nursing Research and the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit at Oxford University, will send out a range of materials to help units implement family-centred care.”
From a personal point of view my local hospital Southmead Hospital in Bristol, their neonatal unit is quite new and does have facilities for the parents and also does a fantastic job of looking after our sick babies and i’d like to say thank you to them
