Manuscript Title:

EFFECT OF GUIDELINES ABOUT ENTERAL FEEDING FOR PRETERM INFANTS ON NURSES’ KNOWLEDGE AND PRACTICES

Author:

AZZA NASSER ABD-EL BASET OTHMAN, HANAN MOHAMED RASHAD AHMED, WAFAA MOHAMED ABDULLAH

DOI Number:

DOI:10.5281/zenodo.18591298

Published : 2026-02-10

About the author(s)

1. AZZA NASSER ABD-EL BASET OTHMAN - Clinical Instructor, Pediatric Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Cairo University, Egypt.
2. HANAN MOHAMED RASHAD AHMED - Emeritus Assistant Professor, Pediatric Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Cairo University, Egypt.
3. WAFAA MOHAMED ABDULLAH - Professor, Pediatric and Neonatology Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Cairo University, Egypt.

Full Text : PDF

Abstract

Background: Administration of enteral feeding has long been considered the standard of care for nutritional
support in neonatal intensive care units. Good nutritional support is a primary nursing role, therefore, nurses
should have adequate knowledge and practice for caring for preterm infants with enteral feeding Aim: to
evaluate the effect of guidelines about enteral feeding for preterm infants on nurses’ knowledge and
practices. Methods: A quasi-experimental design was utilized at two neonatal intensive care units of El
Manial University Hospital (Kaser Al Aini) and Cairo University Children’s Hospital (El Monira) from
December 2024 to May 2025. A convenient sample of fifty bedside nurses working at both previous settings
was included using two tools: Structured questionnaire and observational checklist regarding enteral
feeding for preterm infants. Results: The study revealed that nurses' level and total mean scores knowledge
and practice of enteral feeding significantly improved after intervention at immediate post and follow up
compared to pre intervention phase. There was a strong positive correlation between nurses’ knowledge
and their practices regarding enteral feeding. No correlations were detected between nurses’ knowledge or
practice and their personal characteristics across all study phases except for age and their qualification.
Conclusion: The implemented guidelines about enteral feeding for pre-term infants had a significant
positive impact on nurses' knowledge and practices at post and follow up intervention, in which nurses who
received guidelines had higher mean post- test scores of knowledge and practices compared to pretest.
Recommendation: All bedside nurses who work at neonatal intensive care units should be educated and
trained periodically about safe administration of enteral feeding.


Keywords

Guidelines, Enteral Feeding, Preterm Infants, Nurses’ Knowledge and Practices.