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The impact of daily gentle touch stimulation on maternal‐infant physiological and behavioral regulation and resilience.

Martine Van Puyvelde, Louise Staring, Jana Schaffers, Cristina Rivas-Smits, Leysa Groenendijk, Laura Smeyers, Laetitia Collette, Anneke Schoofs, Nora Van den Bossche, Francis McGlone

Onderzoeksoutput: Articlepeer review

17 Citaten (Scopus)

Samenvatting

We report the impact of a Gentle Touch Stimulation (GTS) program. Forty-three mothers provided daily 10-min GTS with C-tactile (CT) afferent optimal stroking touch, for 4 weeks to their 3–12 weeks old infants. CT-afferents are cutaneous unmyelinated, low-threshold mechanosensitive nerves hypothesized to underly the regulatory impact of affective touch. We compared physiological and behavioral responses during a no-touch-baseline (BL), static-touch-baseline (BL-T), intervention/control (GTS/CTRL), Still Face (SF) and Reunion (RU) condition for GTS-infants versus a control-group (CTRL) at the start (T1) and end of (T2) of the program. We collected mother-infant ECG, respiration, cortisol, video-recordings, and diary-reports. At T1, physiological arousal significantly increased during SF in both groups, that is, decreased respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) and R-R interval (RRI). At T2, GTS-infants showed significantly increased RSA, RRI, decreased respiration during GTS, buffering SF-arousal and allowing complete recovery during RU; CTRL-infants showed higher SF-arousal and small recovery, under initial BL-levels. Maternal cardio-respiratory showed a metabolic investment during RU. Cortisol and behavioral analyses showed higher arousal in CTRL-infants than GTS-infants at T2. We suggest that the combination of phasic short-term and tonic long-term responses to CT-optimal stroking touch, delivered in a structured daily manner, contribute to the building of infant stress regulation and resilience.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)823-838
Aantal pagina's16
TijdschriftInfant Mental Health Journal
Volume42
Nummer van het tijdschrift6
DOI's
StatusPublished - nov. 2021

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