While mothers recover from Caesarean birth, babies should have skin-to-skin contact with their fathers as it helps to boots their heart rate, a study recommended.
Swedish experts found that a surgically delivered newborn will have a higher and more stable heart rate if lain on their dad’s bare chest than if held or placed in a cot.
Previous research has established that there are various physical and psychological benefits of skin-to-skin contact between parents and newborn children.
However, in many countries, babies born by C-section are placed in neonatal units while their mothers recover — especially after the use of general anaesthetic.
In the UK, around one-in-five births are now performed by Caesarean section, in which the child is delivered through an incision in the stomach and womb.
While mothers recover from Caesarean birth, babies should have skin-to-skin contact with their fathers (pictured) as it helps to boots their heart rate, a study recommended
‘Separating infants and their parents after a Caesarean section is still routine care worldwide,’ said paper author and reproductive health expert Kyllike Christensson of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute.
‘The results show that newborn infants can be safely and adequately cared for by their fathers if their mothers cannot take care of them straight after birth.’
In their study, Professor Christensson and colleagues examined 95 babies born by C-section at a public hospital in Chile during the years 2009–2012.
The team divided each baby into one of three groups — monitoring them every quarter-hour, starting 45 minutes after birth and continuing for a total of one and a quarter hours.
Those babies in the first group were placed on their sides in a cot, while their dads sat nearby in a chair, while those in the second were cradled in their father’s arms.
Newborns in the final group, meanwhile, were lain face-down on their father’s chest — allowing them skin-to-skin contact — before being covered with a blanket.
The team found that the heart rates of the newborns were significantly higher and more stable over time among those in the group that experienced skin-to-skin contact with their fathers.
‘The infants in the skin-to-skin contact group had a higher mean heart rate at 45 minutes after Caesarean delivery than the other two groups,’ said paper author Ana Ayala, also of the Karolinska Institute.
‘This higher alert state lasted until approximately 90 minutes.’
‘No significant differences were noted between the groups when it came to ear temperature or peripheral oxygen saturation.’
A so-called Neonatal Behavioural Assessment was also carried out to measure the babies’ physiological parameters and wakefulness.
This analysis revealed that skin-to-skin contact also improved the babies’ wakefulness in the short term, the researchers said.
In the UK, around one-in-five births are now performed by Caesarean section, in which the child is delivered through an incision in the stomach and womb, as pictured
‘The skin-to-skin group showed some advantages over the cot and fathers’ arms groups when it came to establishing stable physiological parameters and wakefulness,’ said Professor Christensson.
‘This approach should be supported during mother-infant separation.’
The full findings of the study were published in the journal Acta Paediatrica.