The Period of PURPLE Crying program is designed to increase knowledge and change behaviors related to crying and the dangers of shaking infants. It is used to educate parents about normal infant crying, strategies to use when infants cry and the dangers of shaking in an effort to decrease abusive head trauma.
The letters in the word “PURPLE” each stand for a property of crying in normal infants that is frustrating to caregivers:
The program consists of educational materials that are distributed and explained to parents by healthcare professionals. These include a booklet, DVD, and an app. The materials suggest three steps when caring for a crying infant:
The POPC program is designed for parents of newborn infants.
The program has been evaluated in Japan (Fujiwara et al. 2012).
A randomised control trial was conducted with 201 people in Japan (105 in the intervention group and 96 in the control group). Majority of mothers were 30-34 years old (39%). For 46% of mothers this was their first baby. Mother’s were eligible for the study if they had an uneventful pregnancy and gave birth to a healthy baby.
The POPC program has not been evaluated in Australia or with Aboriginal Australians.
The program had a mixed effect on parenting knowledge. Parents who participated in the program are more likely to know details about infant crying (e.g. it increases in the first few weeks of life and reaches a peak in the first 2-3 months). However, the program did not impact parent’s knowledge on shaking babies.
Parenting stress: the program shows no effects in rates of frustration of parents with infant crying.
Positive parenting behaviour (Shaken Baby Syndrome): the program shows no effects on responses to general crying and unsoothable crying, and caregiver self-talk responses to unsoothable crying.
No negative outcomes were found.
Overall, the POPC program has a mixed effect on client outcomes.
Mixed research evidence (with no adverse outcomes):
The POPC program is implemented using an 11-page booklet, DVD and/or app. These are explained to new parents by a healthcare professional at a one-off discussion before their infants are two weeks of age. The materials describe what shaken baby syndrome is, the frustration of crying infants and the dangers of shaking. They also emphasise telling other caregivers about the program. They key steps are outlined:
The hospital or clinic administering the POPC must purchase the booklets which contain a code to watch the video. The full program is available at three levels:
Information about the cost of the POPC program can be found on the website at:
https://store.dontshake.org/category-s/108.htm
The booklet and DVD cost USD$2.30 per copy, while the booklet and app package is USD$2.00 per copy.
Materials have been created in multiple languages and are intended to be distributed before infants are 2 weeks old.
Cultural differences in response to infants crying should be considered when implementing the POPC program. Studies in Japan show that there are differences in risk factors for shaken baby syndrome than in western society, such as two infant age peaks, and having even one sibling (Fujiwara, Okuyama, & Miyasaka, 2008; Fujiwara, Okuyama, Tsui, & Koenen, 2008). There may need to be adaptation of the materials if implemented within CALD or Indigenous communities (Fujiwara et al. 2012).
One RCT conducted in Japan with 201 participants (Fujiwara et al. 2012).
POPC program website: http://purplecrying.info
16 Feb 2023
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Informed by lessons of the past, Department of Communities and Justice is improving how we work with Aboriginal people and communities. We listen and learn from the knowledge, strength and resilience of Stolen Generations Survivors, Aboriginal Elders and Aboriginal communities.
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