Purpose This study aimed to characterize the relationship between parental stress and nurses’ communication as perceived by parents of high-risk newborns in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).
Methods The participants were 54 parents of high-risk newborns in a NICU. Data were collected from January to March 2018. Parental stress and parents’ perceptions of nurses’ communication ability and styles were measured using a questionnaire.
Results The average scores for parental stress and nurses’ communication ability were 3.39 and 4.38 respectively, on a 5-point scale. Parents most commonly reported that nurses showed a friendly communication style, followed by informative and authoritative styles. Mothers and fathers reported significantly different levels of parental stress. Parental stress showed a negative correlation with nurses’ perceived verbal communication ability. Higher scores for nurses’ verbal communication ability and for friendly and informative communication styles were associated with lower parental stress induced by the environment, the baby’s appearance and behaviors, and treatments in the NICU.
Conclusion The findings of this study suggest that nurses need to offer proper information for parents and to support parents by encouraging them to express their emotions of stress and by providing parents with therapeutic communication and opportunities to participate in care.
Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by
Influencing Factors of Coping Strategies in Mothers of High‐Risk Newborns: Perceived Stress and Nursing Support Jung‐A Kim, Hye‐Young Jang International Journal of Nursing Practice.2025;[Epub] CrossRef
Influence of perceived parental child-rearing attitudes and ego identity on college adjustment among Korean nursing students Hye Seon Choi, Sona Lee, Eunju Seo BMC Nursing.2024;[Epub] CrossRef
The experience of fathers whose infants were hospitalized in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in South Korea: A scoping review Jiyeon Lee, Sunyeob Choi Journal of Pediatric Nursing.2023; 72: 36. CrossRef
Effects of a Noncontact Visit Program in the NICU for the Prevention of COVID-19 Hye Young Ahn, Hee Jee Jo, Hyun Jeong Ko Healthcare.2023; 11(15): 2152. CrossRef
Effects of parent-provider communication during infant hospitalization in the NICU on parents: A systematic review with meta-synthesis and narrative synthesis Nanon H.M. Labrie, Nicole R. van Veenendaal, Ramona A. Ludolph, Johannes C.F. Ket, Sophie R.D. van der Schoor, Anne A.M.W. van Kempen Patient Education and Counseling.2021; 104(7): 1526. CrossRef
Differences in perceived parental stress between parents with very low birth weight infants and nurses in neonatal intensive care units, South Korea Seol-Hee Moon, Ho-Ran Park, Dong Yeon Kim Child Health Nursing Research.2021; 27(3): 297. CrossRef
Factors influencing the quality of nursing care as perceived by mothers of hospitalized children in South Korea Ina Jin, Hun Ha Cho Child Health Nursing Research.2021; 27(3): 266. CrossRef
Addressing the Needs of Mothers with Infants in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: A Qualitative Secondary Analysis Ah Rim Kim Asian Nursing Research.2020; 14(5): 327. CrossRef