Taking Your Baby Home
Whether you have spent days, weeks, or months visiting and leaving
your infant at the hospital, the homecoming is a long-awaited event. Your
premature infant is considered ready to go home when
he or she is able to:
- Take all feedings by nipple and continue to
gain weight. In rare cases, infants are discharged while still on partial
tube-feedings that are given by parents at home. If
your infant is sent home with tube-feedings, you will be trained by the NICU
staff before discharge.
- Maintain body heat in an open infant
bed.
- Breathe well. (An infant whose lungs have suffered damage may
be sent home with portable oxygen.)
- Have normal breathing and a
normal heart rate for a week. (An infant who is otherwise mature enough yet
still stops breathing occasionally or has lung disease or other breathing
problems may be sent home with an
apnea monitor.)
Some infants are ready to go home as early as 5 weeks before their
due date. Other infants, usually those who have had
medical complications, may be discharged later than
their due date.
Preparing to go home As your infant's discharge from the hospital approaches,
you may feel excitement, impatience, and a new kind of anxiety. Responsibility
for your infant's care, which has so recently required high technology and
medical training, is now being transferred to you. You can best prepare
yourself for this transition by learning:
You will also want to:
- Discuss your questions and concerns with the
neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) staff and your baby's
doctor.
- Make a pediatric appointment for a few days after your
infant's homecoming. Weekly medical checks after discharge are especially
important for a premature infant, as well as reassuring for you.
If home-based health care and supportive therapies are available to
you, take advantage of them. Home-based services spare you and your infant the
physical and emotional stress of travelling to numerous appointments.