Newborn behavioral observations system in rural Pakistan: A feasibility and acceptability study.

The Newborn Behavioral Observations (NBO) system is a relationship-based tool that helps parents recognize their infant's competencies and learn their behavioral cues, with the goals of enhancing parental responsiveness and satisfaction in the infant-parent relationship. In our study, a pediatrician integrated the NBO into 44 pediatric health care visits of infants in rural Pakistan villages, under the remote guidance of two U.S.-based child psychiatrists. A clinician then gave the mothers a survey about their experience of the NBO and found that the mothers were highly satisfied, reporting greater appreciation of their infant's strengths, greater understanding of their infant's behavioral cues, stronger attachment to their infant, and greater self-confidence as a mother. In their consideration of these results, the authors explore cultural reasons for the mothers' responses and generate hypotheses to inform an outcome study of a similar intervention. This was a feasibility and acceptability study and was not randomized, had no control group, and did not use objective measures of outcome.

[1]  Y. Benyamini,et al.  Editorial: Perinatal Mental Health: Expanding the Focus to the Family Context , 2021, Frontiers in Psychiatry.

[2]  J. Fegert,et al.  Prävalenz und Versorgung der Posttraumatischen Belastungsstörung in Deutschland: Eine bundesweite Auswertung von Krankenkassendaten aus den Jahren 2008 und 2017 , 2021, Psychiatrische Praxis.

[3]  S. Juul,et al.  What are the effects of supporting early parenting by newborn behavioral observations (NBO)? A cluster randomised trial , 2020, BMC Psychology.

[4]  J. Beecham,et al.  The cost of love: financial consequences of insecure attachment in antisocial youth. , 2019, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[5]  A. Masten,et al.  Resilience in Children: Developmental Perspectives , 2018, Children.

[6]  H. Kennedy,et al.  Survivors of Child Maltreatment and Postpartum Depression: An Integrative Review , 2017, Journal of midwifery & women's health.

[7]  V. Glover,et al.  Prenatal parenting. , 2017, Current opinion in psychology.

[8]  Melissa T. Merrick,et al.  Adverse childhood experiences and life opportunities: Shifting the narrative , 2017, Children and youth services review.

[9]  E. Tronick,et al.  Self-Regulatory Processes in Early Development , 2016 .

[10]  E. Tronick,et al.  Waddington, Dynamic Systems, and Epigenetics , 2016, Front. Behav. Neurosci..

[11]  A. Stein,et al.  Randomized controlled trial of a home‐visiting intervention on infant cognitive development in peri‐urban South Africa , 2016, Developmental medicine and child neurology.

[12]  B. McManus Integration of the Newborn Behavioral Observations (NBO) System into Care Settings for High-Risk Newborns. , 2015 .

[13]  S. Nicolson Let's Meet Your Baby as a Person: From Research to Preventive Perinatal Practice and Back Again, with the Newborn Behavioral Observations. , 2015 .

[14]  Shannon M. Monnat,et al.  Long-Term Physical Health Consequences of Adverse Childhood Experiences , 2015, The Sociological quarterly.

[15]  S. Porges Making the World Safe for our Children: Down-regulating Defence and Up-regulating Social Engagement to ‘Optimise’ the Human Experience , 2015, Children Australia.

[16]  R. Yehuda,et al.  Site-specific methylation changes in the glucocorticoid receptor exon 1F promoter in relation to life adversity: systematic review of contributing factors , 2014, Front. Neurosci..

[17]  N. Ekas,et al.  Attachment in the making: mother and father sensitivity and infants' responses during the Still-Face Paradigm. , 2014, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[18]  B. McManus,et al.  A Neurobehavioral Intervention Incorporated into a State Early Intervention Program is Associated with Higher Perceived Quality of Care Among Parents of High-Risk Newborns , 2014, The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research.

[19]  J. Seekings,et al.  Violence, violence prevention, and safety: a research agenda for South Africa. , 2012, South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde.

[20]  N. Fox,et al.  Psychiatric Outcomes in Young Children with a History of Institutionalization , 2011, Harvard review of psychiatry.

[21]  J. Bremner,et al.  The enduring effects of abuse and related adverse experiences in childhood , 2006, European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience.

[22]  V. Moghadam,et al.  PATRIARCHY AND THE POLITICS OF GENDER IN MODERNISING SOCIETIES: IRAN, PAKISTAN AND AFGHANISTAN , 1992 .