Title: Clinical observation of comprehensive comfort care preventing feeding intolerance in preterm children
Abstract: Objective To investigate the comprehensive comfort care of premature children fed conditions and the im-pact of weight gain and prevention of the effects of feeding intolerance. Methods Eighty-nine cases of premature children were randomly assigned to the intervention group and the control group, the intervention group received rou-tine care based on the implementation of integrated comfort care, compared two groups of daily intake of milk, up to full enteral nutrition times, daily body weight gain, time to regain birth weight, incidence of feeding intolerance and performance. Results The intervention group daily intake of milk, up to full enteral nutrition time difference compared with the control group were statistically significant(P 0.05). Intervention group daily body weight gain, time to regain birth weight compared with the control group, the difference were statistically significant( P 0.05). Intervention group the incidence of feeding intolerance and abdominal distension, vomiting, gastric residual, such as performance difference compared with the control group were statistically significant( P 0.05). Conclusion Postural care, gastrointestinal care, massage and other measures to improve the premature child care comfort and promote functional matura-tion of the gastrointestinal tract, reduce feeding intolerance, is conducive to growth and development in preterm children.
Publication Year: 2013
Publication Date: 2013-01-01
Language: en
Type: article
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