Study questions social media in birthing suites

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A Victoria University of Wellington study is investigating how the internet and cellphones, particularly social media, affect mothers connecting with their newborn babies.

The research is a multidisciplinary study involving Dr. Jayne Krisjanous from Victoria University's School of Marketing and International Business, Dr. Robyn Maude from the University's Graduate School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, and Ph.D. student Marlini Bakri.

The study, which is still underway, is exploring the role Facebook, Instagram and Twitter plays in the 'golden hour' after birth. The first 60 minutes of a baby's life are believed to provide important physical and psychological benefits for mother and baby.

Midwives across the country have noticed a growing number of women jumping online within that first hour.

Dr. Krisjanous says there is an immediate wave of response to posts that seems to require some attention and responding to—and this is where it can become disruptive.

She also says newborns experience major physiological changes to circulation and in their neurological responses through exposure to light, sound, touch, cold and gravity, whilst women experience significant neuro-hormonal changes at birth. These changes mediate maternal-infant attachment, and social media in the suite can be an incursion.

Citation: Study questions social media in birthing suites (2018, July 12) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2018-07-social-media-birthing.html
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