# Impact of Premature Birth and Delayed Cuddling on Maternal Support Needs and Satisfaction With Postnatal Care and Changes in Support Over Time

**Authors:** Achim Fieß, Alica Hartmann, Alexander K. Schuster, Stephanie D. Grabitz, Dirk Wackernagel, Michael S. Urschitz, Jonas Tesarz, Manfred E. Beutel, Mareike Ernst, Eva Mildenberger, Sandra Gißler

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/cch.70170 · 2025-11-20

## TL;DR

The study finds that premature birth and delayed first cuddling increase mothers' unmet support needs and affect satisfaction with postnatal care, highlighting the need for tailored interventions.

## Contribution

The study reveals how premature birth and delayed bonding uniquely impact maternal and paternal support needs and satisfaction with healthcare services.

## Key findings

- Mothers of preterm infants with delayed cuddling report higher administrative, social, and medical support needs.
- Delayed cuddling is linked to lower satisfaction with midwifery care but not physician care.
- Fathers show similar but less pronounced patterns in support needs and care satisfaction.

## Abstract

Preterm birth and early bonding disruptions such as delayed first cuddling may increase parental vulnerability and support needs in the postnatal period. However, little is known about how these factors interact to shape paternal perceptions of care and unmet support needs across different domains.

This retrospective cohort study drew on data from 1559 individuals aged 4–52 years and linked parental reports from 940 mothers and 614 fathers. Participants were categorised by gestational age of the children into extremely preterm (≤ 28 weeks), very preterm (29–32 weeks), moderately preterm (33–36 weeks) and term (≥ 37 weeks). Multivariable logistic regression was used to examine associations between gestational age, birth weight percentile and delayed first cuddling with maternal desires for administrative, social and medical support. Perceived quality of care from healthcare providers was also assessed.

Mothers of preterm infants who experienced delayed cuddling reported significantly higher needs for administrative, social and medical support compared to mothers of term infants. Delayed cuddling emerged as a consistent predictor of increased support needs across all domains. Mothers of preterm infants were more likely to rate physician care positively, while delayed cuddling and low birth weight percentile were associated with lower satisfaction with midwifery care. Fathers showed similar but less pronounced patterns, with administrative support needs elevated in preterm groups.

Preterm birth and delayed first cuddling are associated with greater maternal support needs and lower satisfaction with certain aspects of care, particularly midwifery services. These findings underscore the importance of early, well‐coordinated and responsive postnatal support structures, especially for mothers of preterm infants and those who experienced bonding disruptions. Tailored interventions addressing administrative, social and emotional support needs may help reduce long‐term stress and improve parent–infant outcomes.

Mothers of preterm infants and those who experienced delayed first cuddling report greater unmet needs for administrative, social and medical support.Satisfaction with postnatal care varies by provider type, with lower ratings for midwifery care linked to delayed cuddling.Paternal perceptions of support show similar but less pronounced patterns, underlining the need to include fathers more systematically in research and support planning.Tailored postnatal interventions should account for early birth and first physical contact experiences and address both maternal and paternal support needs to improve family outcomes.

Mothers of preterm infants and those who experienced delayed first cuddling report greater unmet needs for administrative, social and medical support.

Satisfaction with postnatal care varies by provider type, with lower ratings for midwifery care linked to delayed cuddling.

Paternal perceptions of support show similar but less pronounced patterns, underlining the need to include fathers more systematically in research and support planning.

Tailored postnatal interventions should account for early birth and first physical contact experiences and address both maternal and paternal support needs to improve family outcomes.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infants (MESH:D063766), Premature (MESH:C536271)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12631720/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12631720