Publication | Open Access
Impact of Respiratory Syncytial Virus–Confirmed Hospitalizations on Caregivers of US Preterm Infants
42
Citations
20
References
2019
Year
Neonatal ResuscitationNursingFamily MedicineRespiratory Virus ImmunityNeonatologyRsvh PersistsCaregiverRespiratory ComplicationsPediatricsPediatric Lung DiseaseVirologyInfectious Respiratory DiseaseNewborn MedicineUs Preterm InfantsMedicineConfirmed Rsv DiseaseHealth Services ResearchHigh-risk Preterm Infants
This study assessed the impact of respiratory syncytial virus-confirmed hospitalizations (RSVH) on caregivers of high-risk preterm infants. Caregivers for infants born at 29 to 35 weeks' gestational age and hospitalized for confirmed RSV disease responded to measures of self-rated and perceived infant stress (1-7; 7 = very stressful), perceived infant health (0-100; 100 = best imaginable health), and productivity impairment. Data were collected at hospital discharge through 1 month post-discharge. Caregiver responses indicated high stress levels, poor health, and productivity loss were reported at discharge; however, steady improvements were seen through 1 month post-discharge: caregiver-rated stress (from 6 to 2), infant stress (5 to 1), caregiver-perceived infant health (64 to 84), and productivity loss (mothers: 91% to 31%; fathers: 81% to 18%). Qualitative results indicated emotional impact, family routine disruption, financial concerns, and medical concerns persisted at 1 month post-discharge. This study found the caregiver burden of RSVH persists at least 1 month beyond discharge.
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