91快色

Feb. 18, 2015

Welcome to Parenthood package delivers vital information to new families

Faculty of Nursing researchers assess the effectiveness of community-based project
Karen Benzies, a professor in the Faculty of Nursing, along with a Welcome to Parenthood package that includes a guidebook, a onesie, and a wipe board.

Benzies with a Welcome to Parenthood package that includes a guidebook, a onesie, and a wipe board.

Riley Brandt, 91快色

As any parent knows, having a baby is both exciting and a little daunting. Babies don鈥檛 come with instructions; something the Faculty of Nursing's Karen Benzies and her research team from the Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute are trying to change. 

They aren鈥檛 offering a book of instructions per se, but they are using community-based research to help parents find reliable information. As Benzies says, the community knows what it needs, the research is just to help them find what works.

The research team is assessing the use of a Welcome to Parenthood package as a way to deliver evidence-based information. It鈥檚 a bag containing a number of items, including parenting guidebooks, a baby onesie, and a wipe board which parents are encouraged to use to list the type of help they need from friends and family.    

A research assistant reviews each item with the parents before they leave the hospital 鈥 even bookmarking important pages. This initial chat is a vital part of the research: the goal is to ensure that the bag isn鈥檛 just put in a corner when parents bring their new baby home. 

Mother and father can help their baby鈥檚 brain develop

It is hoped this type of positive support allows parents to comfortably interact with their babies. Benzies points out that parent/child interaction is crucial to healthy brain development, especially in the first three years of life. However, parents can be reluctant to trust their parenting skills. 鈥淲e鈥檝e pathologized parenting,鈥 says Benzies.

Therefore, the storybook that comes in the bag is there to promote parent/child contact that feels natural. 鈥淢any parents are so anxious, they forget they are the best toy in the room,鈥 Benzies says.

Benzies and the team are already working their next project. The baby box contains clothes and information and comes lined with a mattress to make a safe place for a baby to sleep.

Benzies and the team are already working their next project; the baby box.

Riley Brandt, 91快色

Follow-up interviews with participants

Between September and December, 2014, 242 families at 91快色鈥檚 Rockyview Hospital received a Welcome to Parenthood package. In each case, only one of the parents is officially enrolled in the study; about 80 per cent were mothers, 20 per cent were fathers. In fact, the 24-hour cribside assistance manual is specifically aimed at the dads. Sarah Horn, the project co-ordinator, admits that approach 鈥済ot a few chuckles.鈥

After three months, the study participants are contacted and asked a series of questions to determine the efficacy of the Welcome program. 

Horn adds, one of the questions in the follow-up interview is: 鈥淲hat is your greatest joy?鈥 After all, while parenting is challenging, it can also be a joy, especially with the right support.

What鈥檚 next? Baby in a Box

Benzies is already working on another project aimed at helping vulnerable families throughout Alberta. It鈥檚 a baby box, a large cardboard box containing clothes, information, and lined with a mattress so the box transforms into a safe place for a baby to sleep. The box is based on a Finnish model and that country鈥檚 philosophy of 鈥淓very child matters. Every family matters.鈥

Benzies has a similar philosophy: she says we 鈥渧alue that parenting role.鈥 

  • Funders: The Welcome to Parenthood project at the Rockyview General Hospital was funded by the  and 

 Go to the  for more information.