Comparison of Breastmilk Odor and Vanilla Odor on Mitigating Premature Infants' Response to Pain During and After Venipuncture

The main purpose of this study was to investigate the calming effects of breastmilk odor and vanilla odor on preterm infants during and after venipuncture. One hundred thirty-five preterm infants were randomly selected and divided into three groups: control, vanilla odor, and breastmilk odor. Infant...

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Veröffentlicht in:Breastfeeding medicine 2015-09, Vol.10 (7), p.362-365
Hauptverfasser: Jebreili, Mahnaz, Neshat, Hanieh, Seyyedrasouli, Aleheh, Ghojazade, Morteza, Hosseini, Mohammad Bagher, Hamishehkar, Hamed
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container_end_page 365
container_issue 7
container_start_page 362
container_title Breastfeeding medicine
container_volume 10
creator Jebreili, Mahnaz
Neshat, Hanieh
Seyyedrasouli, Aleheh
Ghojazade, Morteza
Hosseini, Mohammad Bagher
Hamishehkar, Hamed
description The main purpose of this study was to investigate the calming effects of breastmilk odor and vanilla odor on preterm infants during and after venipuncture. One hundred thirty-five preterm infants were randomly selected and divided into three groups: control, vanilla odor, and breastmilk odor. Infants in the breastmilk group were exposed to breastmilk odor, and infants in the vanilla group were exposed to vanilla odor from 5 minutes before the start of sampling until 30 seconds after sampling. The Premature Infant Pain Profile was used for calculating quality of pain in infants during and after sampling. Statistical analyses showed that both vanilla and breastmilk odors had calming effects on premature infants during sampling, but just breastmilk odor had calming effects on infants after the end of sampling. Compared with vanilla odor, breastmilk odor has more calming effects on premature infants. Breastmilk odor can be used for calming premature infants during and after venipuncture.
doi_str_mv 10.1089/bfm.2015.0060
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One hundred thirty-five preterm infants were randomly selected and divided into three groups: control, vanilla odor, and breastmilk odor. Infants in the breastmilk group were exposed to breastmilk odor, and infants in the vanilla group were exposed to vanilla odor from 5 minutes before the start of sampling until 30 seconds after sampling. The Premature Infant Pain Profile was used for calculating quality of pain in infants during and after sampling. Statistical analyses showed that both vanilla and breastmilk odors had calming effects on premature infants during sampling, but just breastmilk odor had calming effects on infants after the end of sampling. Compared with vanilla odor, breastmilk odor has more calming effects on premature infants. 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source MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Breast Feeding - psychology
Female
Humans
Infant Behavior
Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Infant, Newborn
Infant, Premature
Iran
Male
Milk, Human
Odorants
Pain
Pain - etiology
Pain - prevention & control
Phlebotomy - adverse effects
Respiratory therapy
Smell
Vanilla
title Comparison of Breastmilk Odor and Vanilla Odor on Mitigating Premature Infants' Response to Pain During and After Venipuncture
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