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Clinical Pediatrics
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Factors Affecting Visitation of Sick Newborns

George P. Giacoia

Darnelle Rutledge

Kerstin West

A study of visiting patterns to an intensive care nursery over a 6-month period was undertaken. Data on visits were obtained from 167 admissions, 99 of which were from infants transferred from other towns. In addition, the parents were interviewed to determine factors precluding visiting. Inborn (Group A) and out-of-town (Group B) data were analyzed. For Group A, the mean number of weekly visits was 6.59 (range, 1.7-16.5) and the total cost of visiting during hospitalization was $135.00 (range, 5.76-649.36); for Group B, the figures were 3.6 (range, 0.1- 12.4) and $328.00 (range, 12.96-1523.36), respectively.

Parents in Group B visited less often, made fewer telephone inquiries, and earned a lower salary than parents in Group A. Frequency of visits was correlated to social class. The most commonly identified factors limiting visiting were care of siblings, demands of work, cost of the trip, and distance.

Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 24, No. 5, 259-262 (1985)
DOI: 10.1177/000992288502400506


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