Parental use of religious and secular coping strategies while their prematurely born baby receives intensive medical care may affect the family's interactions.

‘Positive secular coping techniques include asking for family and friend support and active problem solving; negative examples are choosing to not deal with the problem or denying the problem.’

"The crisis of a baby that is born too early and requires intensive medical care to sustain life presents an enormous challenge to parents' ability to handle such stress," said Kim Doheny, associate professor of pediatrics, Penn State College of Medicine. "The use of secular and spiritual and religious beliefs may foster effective coping and enhance the parents' ability to care for and bond with their baby."




Previous research has shown that the NICU can add a higher level of stress because of the unfamiliarity of the unit, and that it also can create barriers to parents being involved in the baby's care. Parents cope with this stress through positive and negative secular and religious strategies. Examples of positive secular coping techniques are asking for family and friend support and active problem solving; negative examples are choosing to not deal with the problem or denying the problem.
Positive religious/spiritual coping includes a belief that life has meaning, a sense of being connected to others on a spiritual level and feeling a secure relationship with God. Strategies include seeking forgiveness, exploring religious or spiritual support and prayer.
Negative religious coping occurs when parents feel less secure in their relationship with God and have trouble finding meaning in life. These parents may feel abandoned or punished by God.
"We already know that how parents cope with their baby's hospitalization is vital to their effectiveness as parents after discharge, but we don't know how religious or spiritual coping plays into parents' lives while in the NICU and following discharge," said co-author Gina Brelsford, associate professor of psychology, Penn State Harrisburg.
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This is the first study of its kind exploring religious coping strategies in the NICU. Researchers reported their results in Advances in Neonatal Care.In the study, parents who used negative religious coping strategies and felt abandoned or punished by God had higher levels of denial and lower levels of feeling connected to family.
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"This requires a focus on the family unit, in particular providing basic psychological supports for all families and more intensive psychological care for those in great need while in the NICU. Also, many parents have a religious or spiritual lens through which they are experiencing the NICU."
Added Doheny, "Parents who cope more effectively with stress during the time of hospitalization are more likely to successfully transition home with their babies after discharge. In addition to the use of family support groups and individual or group psychological counseling, health care practitioners should ask parents about their religious or spiritual worldviews to determine if support gained through this realm would be helpful to them."
Limitations in this study included a small sample size that included mostly white married couples, and that the self-reporting of the participants may not have captured the impact of specific coping strategies on family relationships.Researchers will next use a larger group to look at parental stress levels and mental health and relationship functioning at six to nine months after their baby was discharged from the NICU and will determine if parents use secular and religious/spiritual coping to manage stress after discharge from the hospital.
Source-Eurekalert