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Dive into the research topics where Rosemary White-Traut is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosemary White-Traut.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2002

Effect of auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular intervention on length of stay, alertness, and feeding progression in preterm infants

Rosemary White-Traut; Michael N. Nelson; Jean M. Silvestri; Ushanalini Vasan; Susan Littau; Patricia Meleedy-Rey; Gouguang Gu; Minu Patel

This study determined whether an auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular intervention (ATVV) reduced the length of hospitalization of 37 preterm infants by increasing the proportion of alert behavioral states, thereby improving their feeding progression. Participants comprised 12 infants born between 23 and 26 weeks’gestation with normal head ultrasounds and 25 CNS‐injured infants born between 23 and 31 weeks’gestation. Infants were randomly assigned to the control group (11 males, five females) or study group (seven males, 14 females) at 32 weeks’postconceptional age. ATVV intervention was administered to the study group for 15 minutes, twice daily, 5 days per week, from 33 weeks of age until discharge. The study group demonstrated increased alertness during the first 5 minutes of intervention, which was significantly correlated to length of stay (p<0.05). The proportion of nippled (teat) intake increased significantly faster for the study group (p=0.0001). Infants in the study group were discharged at a mean of 36.54 weeks, 1.6 weeks earlier than control infants (p<0.05). ATVV intervention facilitated increased alertness, faster transition to complete nipple feeding, and decreased length of hospitalization.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2009

Detection of salivary oxytocin levels in lactating women.

Rosemary White-Traut; Kaoru Watanabe; Hossein Pournajafi-Nazarloo; Dorie W. Schwertz; Aleeca F. Bell; C. Sue Carter

Oxytocin is a neuropeptide with widespread influence on many physiological and social functions including: labor and birth, lactation, sexual behavior, nurturing maternal behaviors, and stress reduction. However, our understanding of oxytocins roles has been hampered by lack of noninvasive methods for assessing oxytocin levels. The goal of the present study was to assess whether oxytocin could be detected in saliva and whether changes occurred in the pattern of oxytocin release among lactating women from before, at initiation and after breast feeding. Using a prospective repeated measures design, 11 research participants each provided 18 saliva samples during three feeding cycles (before, at initiation and after breast feeding) for two 24-hr data collection periods (Days 1 and 2). Within each day, saliva was collected at late evening, early morning, and late morning. Salivary samples were concentrated fourfold by dehydration prior to analysis and oxytocin was measured in saliva using an enzyme immunoassay (EIA). Salivary oxytocin values, when reconverted to their original levels, ranged from 6.44 to 61.05 pg/ml. Oxytocin values in saliva varied significantly as a function of the breast feeding cycle, but did not show reliable differences as a function of the time of feeding. Oxytocin was highest before feeding, followed by a decrease at initiation of feeding, and an increase at 30 min after feeding. The findings suggest that oxytocin release into saliva increases in anticipation of feedings. This study also supports the potential usefulness of salivary measures of oxytocin as a noninvasive index of changes in this peptide.


Issues in Comprehensive Pediatric Nursing | 1996

The Role of Temperament in Pediatric Pain Response

Lily W. Lee; Rosemary White-Traut

This study explores the role of temperament in pediatric pain perception and responses. The sample consisted of 3- to 7-year-olds (N = 137) who required preoperative blood test by venipuncture. Blood sampling procedures were videotaped. Childrens pain responses were measured by their behaviors, pulse oximetry, and self-report of pain. Parents reported their childs usual pain behaviors, previous pain experiences, and temperament. The temperament category threshold was found to relate to self-report and distress behaviors during the preparation phase. The temperament categories of activity, mood, approach, adaptability, intensity, and threshold related to childrens previous pain responses and usual pain behaviors. These previous behaviors were strong predictors for their responses to venipuncture pain.


Infant Behavior & Development | 2013

Mother-infant interaction improves with a developmental intervention for mother-preterm infant dyads

Rosemary White-Traut; Kathleen F. Norr; Camille Fabiyi; Kristin M. Rankin; Zhyouing Li; Li Liu

While premature infants have a high need for positive interactions, both infants and their mothers are challenged by the infants biological immaturity. This randomized clinical trial of 198 premature infants born at 29-34 weeks gestation and their mothers examined the impact of the H-HOPE (Hospital to Home: Optimizing the Infants Environment) intervention on mother-premature infant interaction patterns at 6-weeks corrected age (CA). Mothers had at least 2 social environmental risk factors such as minority status or less than high school education. Mother-infant dyads were randomly assigned to the H-HOPE intervention group or an attention control group. H-HOPE is an integrated intervention that included (1) twice-daily infant stimulation using the ATVV (auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular-rocking stimulation) and (2) four maternal participatory guidance sessions plus two telephone calls by a nurse-community advocate team. Mother-infant interaction was assessed at 6-weeks CA using the Nursing Child Assessment Satellite Training-Feeding Scale (NCAST, 76 items) and the Dyadic Mutuality Code (DMC, 6-item contingency scale during a 5-min play session). NCAST and DMC scores for the Control and H-HOPE groups were compared using t-tests, chi-square tests and multivariable analysis. Compared with the Control group (n = 76), the H-HOPE group (n = 66) had higher overall NCAST scores and higher maternal Social-Emotional Growth Fostering Subscale scores. The H-HOPE group also had significantly higher scores for the overall infant subscale and the Infant Clarity of Cues Subscale (p < 0.05). H-HOPE dyads were also more likely to have high responsiveness during play as measured by the DMC (67.6% versus 58.1% of controls). After adjustment for significant maternal and infant characteristics, H-HOPE dyads had marginally higher scores during feeding on overall mother-infant interaction (β = 2.03, p = 0.06) and significantly higher scores on the infant subscale (β = 0.75, p = 0.05) when compared to controls. In the adjusted analysis, H-HOPE dyads had increased odds of high versus low mutual responsiveness during play (OR = 2.37, 95% CI = 0.97, 5.80). Intervening with both mother and infant is a promising approach to help premature infants achieve the social interaction patterns essential for optimal development.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2006

Quantitative ultrasound assessment of the rat cervix.

Barbara L. McFarlin; William D. O'Brien; Michael L. Oelze; James F. Zachary; Rosemary White-Traut

Objective. The purpose of this research was to detect cervical ripening with a new quantitative ultrasound technique. Methods. Cervices of 13 nonpregnant and 65 timed pregnant (days 15, 17, 19, 20, and 21 of pregnancy) Sprague Dawley rats were scanned ex vivo with a 70‐MHz ultrasound transducer. Ultrasound scatterer property estimates (scatterer diameter [SD], acoustic concentration [AC], and scatterer strength factor [SSF]) from the cervices were quantified and then compared to hydroxyproline and water content. Insertion loss (attenuation) was measured in 3 rats in each of the 6 groups. Discriminant analysis was used to predict gestational age group (cervical ripening) from the ultrasound variables SD, SSF, and AC. Results. Differences were observed between the groups (SD, AC, and SSF; P < .0001). Quantitative ultrasound measures changed as the cervix ripened: (1) SD increased from days 15 to 21; (2) AC decreased from days 15 to 21; and (3) SSF was the greatest in the nonpregnant group and the least in the day 21 group. Cervix hydroxyproline content increased as pregnancy progressed (P < .003) and correlated with group, SD, AC, and SSF (P < .001). Discriminant analysis of ultrasound variables predicted 56.4% of gestational group assignment (P < .001) and increased to 77% within 2 days of the predicted analysis. Cervix insertion loss was greatest for the nonpregnant group and least for the day 21 group. Conclusions. Quantitative ultrasound predicted cervical ripening in the rat cervix, but before use in humans, quantitative ultrasound will need to predict gestational age in the later days of gestation with more precision.


Neonatology | 2000

Heart rate variability in preterm brain-injured and very-low-birth-weight infants.

B.D. Hanna; Michael N. Nelson; Rosemary White-Traut; Jean M. Silvestri; Ushanalini Vasan; P. Meleedy Rey; Minu Patel; Elizabeth Comiskey

Heart rate variability (HRV) reflects the complex interplay of the sympathetic and parasympathetic innervation of the heart. Developmental maturation of the fetus and newborn results in predictable alterations in the neural cardiac control of heart rate. Furthermore, patterns of HRV are closely correlated to clinical outcome in several pathologic situations. The first aim of this study was to characterize the maturational patterns of HRV in a group of developmentally at-risk newborns (those with severe hemorrhagic or ischemic brain injury and extremely immature, low-birth-weight infants). Secondly, we sought to determine whether a correlation exists between HRV and length of hospital stay, diagnosis of cerebral palsy, and neurodevelopmental test scores at 1-year corrected age. Time domain indices of HRV were computed longitudinally from 32 to 37 weeks of corrected gestational age in 19 very low birth weight, preterm infants. Among the 19 infants studied, 7 infants had no evidence of brain injury, 7 infants had periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), 3 infants had grade III/IV intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH), and 2 infants had both IVH and PVL. Neurologic injuries were documented using ultrasound and neurodevelopmental progress was followed through 1 year of corrected gestational age. A multivariate repeated measures analysis was performed to determine the relationship between the type of perinatal brain injury and neurodevelopmental status at 1 year of corrected gestational age. The type of perinatal brain injury was highly correlated to specific patterns of HRV with multivariate regression models producing adjusted r2 values ranging from 0.63 to 0.99. The type of perinatal brain injury was highly correlated to the developmental outcome measures (p < 0.0000) with PVL patients having the lowest neurodevelopmental scores, IVH patients having the highest scores, and noninjured infants having midrange, grossly normal values. Using ANOVA, HRV was correlated to outcome, but individual comparisons revealed statistical significance only for the noninjured group (p < 0.04). However, multivariate models, which characterized outcome within each brain injury group, were highly significant (adjusted r 2 ranged from 0.23 to 0.89). In summary, the type of perinatal brain injury determined the pattern of HRV and HRV was highly correlated to length of hospital stay and neurodevelopmental function assessed at 1 year of corrected gestational age.


Infant Behavior & Development | 2014

Maternally administered interventions for preterm infants in the NICU: Effects on maternal psychological distress and mother–infant relationship

Diane Holditch-Davis; Rosemary White-Traut; Janet Levy; T. Michael O'Shea; Victoria Geraldo; Richard J. David

Although studies have examined the effects of interventions focused on preterm infants, few studies have examined the effects on maternal distress (anxiety, depressive symptoms, post-traumatic stress symptoms, parenting stress) or parenting. This study examined the effects of the auditory-tactile-visual-vestibular (ATVV) intervention and kangaroo care (KC) on maternal distress and the mother-infant relationship compared to an attention control group. 240 mothers from four hospitals were randomly assigned to the three groups. Maternal characteristics in the three groups were similar: 64.1% of ATVV mothers, 64.2% of KC mothers, and 76.5% of control mothers were African American; maternal age averaged 26.3 years for ATVV mothers, 28.1 for KC mothers, and 26.6 for control mothers; and years of education averaged 13.6 for ATVV and KC mothers, and 13.1 for control mothers. Mothers only differed on parity: 68.4% of ATVV and 54.7% of KC mothers were first-time mothers as compared to 43.6% of control mothers. Their infants had a similar mean gestational ages (27.0 weeks for ATVV, 27.2 for KC, and 27.4 for control) and mean birthweights (993 g for ATVV, 1022 for KC, and 1023 for control). Mothers completed questionnaires during hospitalization, and at 2, 6 and 12 months corrected age on demographic characteristics, depressive symptoms, state anxiety, post-traumatic stress symptoms, parenting stress, worry about child health, and child vulnerability (only at 12 months). At 2 and 6 months, 45-min videotapes of mother-infant interactions were made, and the HOME Inventory was scored. Behaviors coded from the videotapes and a HOME subscale were combined into five interactive dimensions: maternal positive involvement and developmental stimulation and child social behaviors, developmental maturity, and irritability. Intervention effects were examined using general linear mixed models controlling for parity and recruitment site. The groups did not differ on any maternal distress variable. Kangaroo care mothers showed a more rapid decline in worry than the other mothers. The only interactive dimensions that differed between the groups were child social behaviors and developmental maturity, which were both higher for kangaroo care infants. Change over time in several individual infant behaviors was affected by the interventions. When mothers reported on the interventions they performed, regardless of group assignment, massage (any form including ATVV) was associated with a more rapid decline in depressive symptoms and higher HOME scores. Performing either intervention was associated with lower parenting stress. These findings suggest that as short-term interventions, KC and ATVV have important effects on mothers and their preterm infants, especially in the first half of the first year.


Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing | 2009

Salivary Cortisol and Behavioral State Responses of Healthy Newborn Infants to Tactile‐Only and Multisensory Interventions

Rosemary White-Traut; Dorie W. Schwertz; Barbara L. McFarlin; Joseph Kogan

OBJECTIVE To compare changes in stress reactivity (measured via the biomarker salivary cortisol) and behavioral state in healthy newborn infants immediately following 1 of 2 interventions: (1) tactile-only stimulation or (2) a multisensory, auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular stimulation with a control group. DESIGN A randomized prospective design pilot study. SETTING Normal newborn nurseries of 2 midwestern perinatal centers. PARTICIPANTS Forty healthy newborn infants receiving standard nursing care. METHODS Infants were randomly assigned to receive 15 minutes of tactile-only, auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular, or no stimulation 30 minutes before feeding. Saliva samples were collected before, immediately following, and 10 minutes postintervention. Behavioral state was judged every minute. RESULTS Tactile-only group infants had the largest increase in cortisol levels, followed by control group infants. In contrast, infants who received the multisensory intervention showed a significant steady decline in cortisol. Asleep was the predominant state for all 3 groups and cry was minimal. CONCLUSIONS Tactile-only stimulation may increase infant stress reactivity while the benefit of the multisensory auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular intervention may be in the reduction of infant stress reactivity. Interventions appeared to have minimal effect on stress reactivity based on behavioral state.


Research in Nursing & Health | 1999

Developmental intervention for preterm infants diagnosed with periventricular leukomalacia

Rosemary White-Traut; Michael N. Nelson; Jean M. Silvestri; Minu Patel; Ushanalini Vasan; B K Han; Nancy Cunningham; Kristen Burns; Karen Kopischke; Laura Bradford

Preterm infants with periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) were evaluated to determine whether multi-sensory stimulation is safe and to assess whether it improved neurobehavior and neurodevelopment. Thirty preterm infants with documented PVL were randomly assigned to control (n= 15) or experimental (Group E) (n= 15) groups at 33 weeks post-conceptional age. Group E infants received 15 minutes of auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular (ATVV) intervention twice a day, five days a week, for four weeks during hospitalization. Repeated measures ANOVA demonstrated that Group E infants experienced significant increases in heart and respiratory rate and a 0.72% drop in hemoglobin saturation, coinciding with a significant behavioral state shift from sleep to alertness during intervention. No differences were identified in neurobehavioral function and neurodevelopment, indicating that Group E suffered no injury. Group E had an average hospital stay nine days shorter than that of controls, with the associated cost savings of


Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine | 2008

An Exploratory Study of Neurohormonal Responses of Healthy Men to Massage

Debra K. Bello; Rosemary White-Traut; Dorie W. Schwertz; Hossein Pournajafi-Nazarloo; C. Sue Carter

213,840. The earlier hospital discharge indicates that ATVV intervention promotes alertness without compromising physiologic status in vulnerable infants.

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Kristin M. Rankin

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Michael N. Nelson

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Barbara L. McFarlin

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Kathleen F. Norr

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Jean M. Silvestri

Rush University Medical Center

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Minu Patel

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Dorie W. Schwertz

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Aleeca F. Bell

University of Illinois at Chicago

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