Skin-to-Skin Care in the Newborn
Published: 22 July 2021
Published: 22 July 2021
Skin-to-skin care, also known as kangaroo care, has well-established benefits from the first moments of birth, through the neonatal period and beyond.
So, how can parents be helped to take full advantage of this practice and what specific benefits can be gained?
Skin-to-skin care simply involves holding an infant in an upright, prone position, skin-to-skin on the parent’s chest. The parents’ clothing or blankets are then wrapped around the baby, providing a kangaroo-like pouch for comfort and security (RCHM 2020).
Improved breastfeeding, as well as deeper levels of parental bonding and attachment, are just a few of the important benefits that can be gained from this contact.
Skin‐to‐skin contact should ideally begin at birth and last continually until the end of the first breastfeeding.
The intimate contact generated by placing the dried, naked baby prone on the mother's bare chest immediately after birth is known to evoke important neuro‐behaviours. It’s also thought that the time frame immediately post-birth may represent a sensitive period for programming future physiology and behaviour (Moore et al. 2016).
The practice of immediate or early skin-to-skin contact has been proven to have many benefits for both mother and baby, including:
(Widström et al. 2019; Pregnancy, Birth and Baby 2021)
It’s long been accepted that immediate, uninterrupted skin-to-skin care for a minimum of one hour is among the most effective strategies in maternity settings to promote exclusive breastfeeding (NICE 2017).
According to Crenshaw (2014), early skin-to-skin contact promotes the initiation of breastfeeding and protects against the negative effects of mother-baby separation.
As Widström et al. (2019) point out, breastfeeding reflexes ‘awaken’ during skin-to-skin care, with newborns exhibiting a specific sequence of behaviours that result in finding and attaching to their mother’s breast. They have also demonstrated that babies who have early skin-to-skin care are more likely to remain exclusively breastfed after discharge and breastfeed for longer durations of time.
Fathers can benefit too. Chen et al. (2017) emphasise the fact that skin-to-skin contact encourages exploring, talking, touching and caring behaviours, helping to reduce parental anxiety whilst also enhancing the attachment process.
Skin-to-skin care can also offer significant benefits for babies who are born prematurely or require special and intensive care. As Lorenz et al. (2021) have discovered, there is no obvious reduction in oxygenation whilst babies are being nursed skin-to-skin in comparison to inside the incubator, suggesting that kangaroo care for babies needing intensive care is safe and should be encouraged.
In very low birth weight infants, skin-to-skin care has also been associated with decreased mortality, enhanced weight gain and decreased incidence of nosocomial infections (RCHM 2020). Skin-to-skin care for a minimum of 10 minutes has also been shown to improve tolerance to painful procedures such as heel prick blood collections and injections.
Enhanced parent-infant attachment and an increased parental ability to recognise their infant’s cues are just a few of the benefits that parents can gain from kangaroo care (RCHM 2020). Other advantages include:
(RCHM 2020)
Yet another benefit is revealed by the work of Kahalon, Preis and Benyamini (2021), who have discovered that the association between skin-to-skin care and birth satisfaction is especially strong for women who had operative births and specifically a caesarean birth. This suggests that the relationship between skin-to-skin contact and birth satisfaction should be emphasised, particularly after operative births.
For vulnerable babies requiring special or intensive care, a nurse should always remain present in the room and extra precautions should be taken before commencing skin-to-skin care, including:
(RCHM 2020)
Ideally, skin-to-skin care should last for at least 45 minutes. If comfort, stability and contentment are evident for both the infant and the parent, this may be continued for two to three hours.
Not all infants in intensive care can benefit, however. Babies who have an umbilical catheter in situ, who need, or are recovering from surgery, or whose condition is unstable may have to wait until their condition improves before skin-to-skin care becomes a safe option for them.
In addition to the many short-term benefits of early skin-to-skin care, some important long-term benefits have been noticed as well.
For example, immediate skin‐to‐skin contact provides the initial colonisation of the baby's microbiome outside of the mother. It’s also been found that the mother's breast temperature increases when the mother and newborn infant are in skin‐to‐skin contact, resulting in an increase in the infants’ foot temperature. This, in turn, indicates a decrease in the negative effects of the stress of being born. Mothers who nurse their babies skin‐to‐skin after birth have also been observed to handle their babies more gently during the early days of breastfeeding and have an improved relationship with their babies within the first year of life (Widström et al. 2019).
The case for both short and long-term skin‐to‐skin care seems to be overwhelmingly positive, and perhaps, as Kahalon, Preis and Benyamini (2021) recommend, maternity care providers should take whatever steps are necessary to facilitate skin-to-skin contact between the mother and her infant either immediately or as soon as possible after birth, whatever the method of delivery.