Parental knowledge and experience of kangaroo care for preterm infants in neonatal intensive care unit: a qualitative study
Yasmine Alabbasi, Alya Elgamri, Yara Abdullah Al-Joher, Wajd Salem Al-Amri, Alanoud Daher Al-Sadoun, Shouq Mansour Kaabi, Sadeem Mtaab Al-Mutairi, Renad Ali Al-Anizi, Wejdan Ahmed Al-Haqwi, Fayzah Alhussain

TL;DR
This study explores how parents in Saudi Arabia understand and experience kangaroo care for preterm infants, highlighting the need for early education and cultural sensitivity in neonatal care.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the cultural, emotional, and educational factors influencing parental adoption of kangaroo care in Saudi NICUs.
Findings
Mothers found kangaroo care empowering and beneficial for infant recovery and breastfeeding.
Parents emphasized the need for antenatal education to improve preparedness and awareness.
Cultural and religious values significantly influenced parental experiences and decision-making.
Abstract
Kangaroo care is a low-cost, evidence-based neonatal intervention known to reduce morbidity and promote infant development and parental bonding. However, in NICUs in Saudi Arabia, parent uptake remains low, and little is known about how cultural, educational, and institutional factors shape parents’ experience and decision-making. This study aimed to assess parental knowledge and experiences regarding kangaroo care in Saudi Arabia and explore the factors influencing their decisions to practice it. A phenomenological qualitative research design was employed. A purposive sampling was used to select parents of stable preterm infants (32–37 weeks’ gestational age), in the NICU using semi-structured interviews. Data was analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. Eighteen mothers (aged 28–40 years) were interviewed. From the analysis, seven themes and five sub-themes were constructed,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Development and Preterm Care · Infant Nutrition and Health · Music Therapy and Health
