Exploring outcomes for women and neonates having skin-to-skin contact during caesarean birth: A quasi-experimental design and qualitative study

Women Birth. 2022 Nov;35(6):e530-e538. doi: 10.1016/j.wombi.2022.01.008. Epub 2022 Jan 26.

Abstract

Problem: Women having an elective caesarean birth are often separated from their babies at birth with newborns transferred to a postnatal ward with the significant other.

Background: Two midwives were employed in 2019 to provide skin-to-skin contact for women who planned for elective caesarean births in a public hospital in metropolitan New South Wales with 4000 births per year and a 39% CB rate (57.8% of these births being elective).

Aim: To compare the outcomes for women and their newborns on the effects of skin-to-skin contact at elective caesarean births within the first five minutes of birth to those who did not have skin-to-skin contact and to explore the lived experiences of women having skin-to-skin contact during their elective caesarean births.

Methods: A quasi-experimental design study with a qualitative component of in-depth interviews. Quantitative analyses included independent t-tests, chi square and logistic regression. Thematic analysis was used for the qualitative data.

Findings: In the quantitative results, there was a reduction in the time to the first feed (t(100) = -11.32, p < 0.001) (M = 38.9, SE = 20.7) (M = 124.9, SE = 50.1) and the first breastfeed (t(100) = -5.2, p < 0.001) (M = 53.2, SE = 82.5) (M = 277, SE = 295.8) with increased breastfeeding on discharge for women that had skin-to-skin contact at caesarean birth in comparison to those who did not receive skin-to-skin contact χ2(1) = 10.22, p < 0.05. In the qualitative results, women who had skin-to-skin contact during their caesarean birth had a positive experience with improved bonding and reported less anxiety and depression than their previous caesarean birth.

Conclusion: This study provides evidence of the benefits of skin-to-skin contact during a caesarean birth.

Keywords: Bonding; Breastfeeding; Caesarean birth; Hypoglycaemia; Newborn; Skin-to-Skin contact; Skin-to-skin care; Women.

MeSH terms

  • Breast Feeding
  • Cesarean Section* / adverse effects
  • Cesarean Section* / methods
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Object Attachment
  • Parturition
  • Pregnancy
  • Research Design*