Preemies benefit from hearing mother鈥檚 voice

It appears that premature babies benefit greatly when they hear their mother鈥檚 voice, especially while still in the hospital.
Researchers have shown that preemies in the neonatal intensive care unit may experience more cognitive development the more their mothers interact with them. That鈥檚 compared with infants who only hear the everyday noises of an ICU.
"Data already existed that proved that the fetus hears their mother鈥檚 voice during pregnancy. Work conducted at the University of Florida in the 1990s showed that sound is transmitted across the womb to the fetus and stimulates the auditory centers. Prematurity interrupts this normal developmental stimulus, especially if the baby is isolated away from the mother and exposed only to mechanical sounds and alarms," David Burchfield, MD, Chief of the Division of Neonatology, said.
Premature babies often experience developmental problems tied to hearing and language. So the researchers sought to find out how they鈥檙e affected by the time spent in an incubator instead of inside their mother鈥檚 womb.
The research team chose a group of preemies born at 25 to 32 weeks gestation. About half of the babies were assigned to hear the normal noises of the hospital, while the other half heard the recorded heartbeat and voices of their respective mothers. They listened to those recordings three hours a day for a month.
The researchers then used ultrasound scans to assess the babies鈥� brains. The infants who heard the recordings had larger auditory cortexes. The auditory cortex is the brain鈥檚 sound center.
Despite these findings, the study notes that a recording is no substitute for a mother鈥檚 actual voice. Also, it鈥檚 unknown how much the voices of other people in the hospital might have affected the babies.
Incubators are great tools that help save many young lives in the neonatal intensive care unit. Parents of premature babies sometimes have to wait to hold their babies, but one thing they can do to help when they visit the NICU is to talk and sing to their teeny-tiny ones. It may seem like a small effort to make, but the benefits could be immeasurable.