The Effect of Umbilical Cord Clamping Distance
Newborn; Infection, Umbilical Cord Infection
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Newborn; Infection focused on measuring colonization, midwives, newborn, separation time, umbilical cord
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Being at 38-42 weeks of gestation, being 18 years of age and over, having primary school education, being able to speak and understand Turkish, having no communication problems, not having a history of active or previous vaginal infection, living in the metropolitan area of Kahramanmaras, accepting home visits during the research process, and agreeing to participate in the research.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Cesarean delivery, premature membrane rupture, newborns with severe congenital anomalies, severely ill infants requiring hospitalization immediately after birth, and babies born with a birth weight of less than 1500 g.
Sites / Locations
- Adnan Menderes University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Experimental
No Intervention
Intervention group I
Intervention group II
Control group
In intervention group I - clamped at a distance of 2 cm - umbilical cord was measured 2 cm from the abdominal wall in the delivery room and clamped. This procedure was carried out by a single researcher using a 2 cm standard measuring tool (cut-to-size ruler) prepared before hand. In order to ensure standardization, this tool was cleaned with a disinfectant and used to measure the umbilical clamp distance of all newborns in the intervention group I.
In intervention group II - clamped at a distance of 3 cm - umbilical cord was measured 3 cm from the abdominal wall in the delivery room and clamped. This procedure was carried out by a single researcher using a 3 cm standard measuring tool (cut-to-size ruler) prepared before hand. In order to ensure standardization, this tool was cleaned with a disinfectant and used to measure the umbilical clamp distance of all newborns in the intervention group II.
Control group - clamped without measuring - no intervention was made in defining the distance at which the umbilical cord of the newborn would be clamped. Another healthcare workers measured the distance at which the umbilical cord had been clamped. The same researcher used a standard measuring tape to measure the distance between the umbilical cord to the clamping point.