Development of an intervention for reducing infant bathing frequency
Lucy P. Goldsmith, Michael R. Perkin, Charlotte Wahlich, Lakshmi Chandrasekaran, Victoria Cornelius, Robert J. Boyle, Carsten Flohr, Amanda Roberts, Kathryn Willis, Michael Ussher, Ivan Sarmiento, Ivan Sarmiento, Ivan Sarmiento

TL;DR
Researchers developed a support package to help parents reduce baby bathing frequency, which may help prevent eczema.
Contribution
A novel, evidence-based intervention package was developed to support minimal infant bathing.
Findings
Barriers and facilitators to minimal bathing were identified through interviews and workshops.
Thirty-six behavior change techniques were mapped to support materials like booklets and videos.
The intervention received positive feedback from experts and families during testing.
Abstract
Bathing babies less frequently and intensively in the first six months of life may prevent eczema, but this has not yet been definitively tested in a randomised controlled trial. Such a trial would require evidence-based support to help parents engage with a minimal bathing routine. The present study reports the development of this support. We adopted a four-stage design process: (i) Pregnant women and their families (n = 31) were interviewed to ascertain key barriers and facilitators towards following the minimal bathing intervention. (ii) These barriers and facilitators were mapped to behaviour change techniques, focussing on the intervention types of education, persuasion and environmental restructuring, alongside appropriate modes of delivery, and prototype intervention materials were developed. (iii) We iteratively refined these materials in a workshop with multidisciplinary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging, Health, and Disability · Inclusive Education and Diversity · Social Sciences and Policies
