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Twenty-year follow-up of kangaroo mother care versus traditional care

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Charpak, Nathalie
Tessier, Rejean
Ruiz, Juan G.
Hernandez, Jose Tiberio
Uriza, Felipe
Villegas, Julieta
Nadeau, Line
Mercier, Catherine
Maheu, Francoise
Marin, Jorge

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Fecha
2017

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American Academy of Pediatrics

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Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Kangaroo mother care (KMC) is a multifaceted intervention for preterm and low birth weight infants and their parents. Short- and mid-term benefits of KMC on survival, neurodevelopment, breastfeeding, and the quality of mother-infant bonding were documented in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) conducted in Colombia from 1993 to 1996. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the persistence of these results in young adulthood. METHODS: From 2012 to 2014, a total of 494 (69%) of the 716 participants of the original RCT known to be alive were identified; 441 (62% of the participants in the original RCT) were re-enrolled, and results for the 264 participants weighing less than 1800 g at birth were analyzed. The KMC and control groups were compared for health status and neurologic, cognitive, and social functioning with the use of neuroimaging, neurophysiological, and behavioral tests. RESULTS: The effects of KMC at 1 year on IQ and home environment were still present 20 years later in the most fragile individuals, and KMC parents were more protective and nurturing, reflected by reduced school absenteeism and reduced hyperactivity, aggressiveness, externalization, and socio-deviant conduct of young adults. Neuroimaging showed larger volume of the left caudate nucleus in the KMC group. CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates that KMC had significant, long-lasting social and behavioral protective effects 20 years after the intervention. Coverage with this efficient and scientifically based health care intervention should be extended to the 18 million infants born each year who are candidates for the method. Copyright © 2017 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
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Adult , preschool , Aggressiveness , Anthropometry , Article , Behavior , Behavior assessment , Behavior disorder , Brain size , Caudate nucleus , Child health care , Cognition , Comparative study , Controlled study , Externalization , Female , Follow up , Fragile individual , Gestational age , Health status , History , Home environment , Human , Hyperactivity , Intelligence quotient , Kangaroo care , Low birth weight , Male , Maternal stress , Miscellaneous named groups , Morbidity , Mortality , Neuroimaging , Neurophysiology , Nurturing behavior , Optometry , Outcome assessment , Priority journal , Protective behavior , Randomized controlled trial (topic) , School attendance , Social interaction , Traditional care , Work history , Young adult , Young adulthood , Adolescent , Breast feeding , Child , Child behavior disorders , Colombia , Conduct disorder , Cross-sectional study , Infant , Infant care , Intelligence , Kangaroo care , Longitudinal study , Low birth weight , Mother child relation , Neurodevelopmental disorders , Newborn , Object relation , Prematurity , Preschool child , Randomized controlled trial , Social adaptation , Survival analysis , Trends , Young adult , Adolescent , Breast feeding , Child , Child behavior disorders , Child , Colombia , Conduct disorder , Cross-sectional studies , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant care , Infant , Infant , Infant , Intelligence , Kangaroo-mother care method , Longitudinal studies , Male , Mother-child relations , Neurodevelopmental disorders , Object attachment , Social adjustment , Survival analysis , Young adult
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