Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review
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Data de Publicação: | 2022 |
Outros Autores: | , |
Tipo de documento: | Conjunto de dados |
Título da fonte: | SciELO Data |
Texto Completo: | https://doi.org/10.48331/scielodata.BSYFWJ |
Resumo: | Supplementary material relating to the appendices of the systematic review article: Objective: Systematic review to search for evidence on the influence of parental self-efficacy on preterm growth infants after hospital discharge. Methods: Inclusion criteria were preterm births, which referred to parental self-efficacy (PSE), related to Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory, and child growth. Exclusion criteria were studies involving the full-term population, which assessed only growth failures associated with biological or sociodemographic elements or isolated parental feelings. Searches were performed in eight databases and the gray literature searches. Results: 7,197 records were identified, and 3,864 remained. Two study studies were eligible for synthesis and analysis. The first study showed that mothers of infants who exhibited excessive growth had higher PSE than mothers who exhibited slow growth. The second study showed that perceived maternal self-efficacy was the determining variable for growth by logistic regression. Since they are observational studies had a higher risk of bias with a low level of evidence. Conclusion: The evidence of the association between growth and parental self-efficacy is not well established, especially in premature infants. |
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https://doi.org/10.48331/scielodata.BSYFWJRover, Milene SedrezRocha, Luana CecíliaViera, Cláudia SiveiraRepercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic reviewSciELO DataSupplementary material relating to the appendices of the systematic review article: Objective: Systematic review to search for evidence on the influence of parental self-efficacy on preterm growth infants after hospital discharge. Methods: Inclusion criteria were preterm births, which referred to parental self-efficacy (PSE), related to Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory, and child growth. Exclusion criteria were studies involving the full-term population, which assessed only growth failures associated with biological or sociodemographic elements or isolated parental feelings. Searches were performed in eight databases and the gray literature searches. Results: 7,197 records were identified, and 3,864 remained. Two study studies were eligible for synthesis and analysis. The first study showed that mothers of infants who exhibited excessive growth had higher PSE than mothers who exhibited slow growth. The second study showed that perceived maternal self-efficacy was the determining variable for growth by logistic regression. Since they are observational studies had a higher risk of bias with a low level of evidence. Conclusion: The evidence of the association between growth and parental self-efficacy is not well established, especially in premature infants.2022-09-09info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0Medicine, Health and Life SciencesInfant, premature;Growth;Self-efficacyParentinginfo:eu-repo/semantics/datasetinfo:eu-repo/semantics/datasetinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionDatasetreponame:SciELO Datainstname:Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO)instacron:SCIRepositório de Dados de PesquisaONGhttps://data.scielo.org/oai/requestdata@scielo.orgopendoar:2022-09-10T05:00:01SciELO Data - Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO)falsedoi:10.48331/scielodata.BSYFWJ |
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
title |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
spellingShingle |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review Rover, Milene Sedrez Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Infant, premature; Growth; Self-efficacy Parenting |
title_short |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
title_full |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
title_fullStr |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
title_full_unstemmed |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
title_sort |
Repercussions of parental self-efficacy on preterm infants' growth after hospital discharge: a systematic review |
author |
Rover, Milene Sedrez |
author_facet |
Rover, Milene Sedrez Rocha, Luana Cecília Viera, Cláudia Siveira |
author_role |
author |
author2 |
Rocha, Luana Cecília Viera, Cláudia Siveira |
author2_role |
author author |
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv |
Rover, Milene Sedrez Rocha, Luana Cecília Viera, Cláudia Siveira |
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv |
Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Infant, premature; Growth; Self-efficacy Parenting |
topic |
Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Infant, premature; Growth; Self-efficacy Parenting |
description |
Supplementary material relating to the appendices of the systematic review article: Objective: Systematic review to search for evidence on the influence of parental self-efficacy on preterm growth infants after hospital discharge. Methods: Inclusion criteria were preterm births, which referred to parental self-efficacy (PSE), related to Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory, and child growth. Exclusion criteria were studies involving the full-term population, which assessed only growth failures associated with biological or sociodemographic elements or isolated parental feelings. Searches were performed in eight databases and the gray literature searches. Results: 7,197 records were identified, and 3,864 remained. Two study studies were eligible for synthesis and analysis. The first study showed that mothers of infants who exhibited excessive growth had higher PSE than mothers who exhibited slow growth. The second study showed that perceived maternal self-efficacy was the determining variable for growth by logistic regression. Since they are observational studies had a higher risk of bias with a low level of evidence. Conclusion: The evidence of the association between growth and parental self-efficacy is not well established, especially in premature infants. |
publishDate |
2022 |
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv |
2022-09-09 |
dc.type.openaire.fl_str_mv |
info:eu-repo/semantics/dataset |
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info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion |
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https://doi.org/10.48331/scielodata.BSYFWJ |
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https://doi.org/10.48331/scielodata.BSYFWJ |
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 |
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openAccess |
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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 |
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Dataset |
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SciELO Data |
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Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO) |
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SciELO Data |
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SciELO Data - Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO) |
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