Newborn Behavioral Observations system in rural Pakistan: A feasibility and acceptability study

Shazia Parveen, Muhammad Zeshan, Sadiq Naveed, Elizabeth Levey, Nusrat Jahan, Alexandra Harrison (2022). Newborn Behavioral Observations system in rural Pakistan: A feasibility and acceptability study.  Infant Mental Health Journal44:125-132: DOI: 10.1002/imhj.22032

Abstract

The Newborn Behavioral Observations (NBO) system is a relationship-based tool that helps parents recognize their infant's competencies and learn their behavioral cues, with the goals of enhancing parental responsiveness and satisfaction in the infant-parent relationship. In our study, a pediatrician integrated the NBO into 44 pediatric health care visits of infants in rural Pakistan villages, under the remote guidance of two U.S.-based child psychiatrists. A clinician then gave the mothers a survey about their experience of the NBO and found that the mothers were highly satisfied, reporting greater appreciation of their infant's strengths, greater understanding of their infant's behavioral cues, stronger attachment to their infant, and greater self-confidence as a mother. In their consideration of these results, the authors explore cultural reasons for the mothers’ responses and generate hypotheses to inform an outcome study of a similar intervention. This was a feasibility and acceptability study and was not randomized, had no control group, and did not use objective measures of outcome.

Previous
Previous

Johnson et al. (2023)

Next
Next

O’D.Connorton, R., Herlihy, A. & Cleary, R. (2022)