Physiological and Psychological Effects of Music Therapy in the Pregnant Woman and Fetus
Eligible age
18–64 yrs
Accepts
Women
Locations
1 state
Healthy volunteers
No
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About this study
To evaluate the effects of music therapy in the care of antepartum mothers admitted for long-term hospitalization due to the high-risk status of their pregnancy. The investigators speculate that mothers who receive music therapy will be more successful in forming positive coping habits, bonding with their infant, and increasing the length of incubation during their pregnancy. Furthermore, there is no research that correlates music therapy applied to stress reduction, increased coping, and increased caregiver-infant bonding prior to birth within one protocol. However, there is a significant amount of research supporting music therapy efficacy with neonatal intensive care unit infants and caregiver bonding post-partum as well as improved physiological signs of stress in infants in the post-partum period.
Sponsor: Christina Chianis Reed
You may qualify if…
- ✓ 1. Pregnant women between 18 and 64 years of age.
- ✓ 2. Singleton pregnancy.
- ✓ 3. Hospital admission due to a high risk of premature delivery.
- ✓ 4. Confirmed diagnosis of preterm premature rupture of membranes.
- ✓ 5. Length of stay in the hospital for 48 hours or more and stable for 48 hours or more.
- ✓ 6. Patients willing to listen to music.
- ✓ 7. Patients willing to participate throughout all the music therapy sessions and the postpartum follow-up visit.
You may not qualify if…
- ✕ 1. Hospital length of stay of less than 48 hours.
- ✕ 2. Non-singleton pregnancy Gravidae with severe medical and or surgical complications during their hospital admission that prevents them from participating in Music Therapy sessions.
Where it's recruiting
Houston
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT05893485 · last updated 2024-09-19