Quiet and parents' touch help opioid users' newborns: study

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Quiet and parents' touch help opioid users' newborns: study
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New research shows that babies born to opioid users have shorter hospital stays when care includes more parent involvement and a quieter environment.

Babies born to opioid users had shorter hospital stays and needed less medication when their care emphasized parent involvement, skin-to-skin contact and a quiet environment, researchers reported Sunday.

Typically, hospitals use a scoring system to decide which babies need medicine to ease withdrawal, which means treatment in newborn intensive care units. “Is the TV on in the room? Do we need to turn that off? Are the lights on? Do we need to turn those down?” Young said. The National Institutes of Health funded the work as part of an initiative to address the U.S. opioid addiction crisis.

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