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Home-like Atmosphere at ‘Crucial’
Time
By Sarah Elizabeth Brown - The Chronicle Journal
November 21, 2006
Until now, parents and newborns who made stops in the neo-natal
intensive care unit before heading home got to know each other
in bare-bones, plain “parenting rooms.”
Armed with a $25,000 donation from Ronald McDonald House
Charities, Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences has made the
four decorated and furnished rooms where parents bond with
their critically ill babies a little more like home. Along
with beds, the main rooms contain arm chairs, rocking chairs,
mini fridges and art on the walls. A bathroom is attached
to each room, illuminated with restful lights.
“This time is crucial, crucial to both (baby and parents),”
Chris Purdon, co-ordinator of pediatrics and neonatal ICU,
said about the transition between hospital and home. Every
year, 425 newborns are treated in the neonatal ICU. As baby
becomes closer to discharge from the ICU, parents can use
the room to become more comfortable caring for their little
one. Many parents sleep overnight in the rooms, said Purdon.
Having parents and baby together promotes the bonding process
and helps the baby heal faster, she said.
The closeness helps parents who may be far from home, and
the closer contact with the infant helps prevent post-partum
depression in mothers, she added. That bonding has been shown
to help babies gain weight faster and helps with the feeding
process. Emotional closeness helps physical health for both
baby and parent, Purdon said.
Hospital staff also use the rooms to teach parents the specialized
care their babies will need once the family returns home.

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