Bachelor of Science in Nursing: Care of Mother, Child and ADOLESCENT (Well Clients)
Bachelor of Science in Nursing: Care of Mother, Child and ADOLESCENT (Well Clients)
Bachelor of Science in Nursing: Care of Mother, Child and ADOLESCENT (Well Clients)
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Care of the Mother during the Perinatal Period
Adele Pilliteri, JoAnne Silbert-Flagg. (2018). Maternal and Child Health Nursing: Care of the
Childbearing and Childrearing Family. (8 th Ed.).
Ricci, Susan Scott Essentials of Maternity, Newborn, and Women's Health Nursing (4th Ed.)
PRENATAL CARE
OBSTETRIC DATA
Gravida - Number of pregnancy regardless of duration as long as the mother becomes pregnant even
abnormal.
Para/Parity- number of viable pregnancy or the total number of pregnancies in which the fetus has
reached the age of viability and subsequently delivered whether dead or alive at birth.
Viability- Ability of the fetus to live outside the uterus at the earliest possible gestational age.
Primipara - Woman who has given birth to one child past age of viability; woman who has completed one
pregnancy to age of viability and subsequently delivered the fetus, whether alive or dead at birth.
Multipara - Woman who has carried two or more pregnancies to viability; woman who has carried two or
more pregnancies of stage of viability and subsequently born alive or dead.
Nulligravida - Woman who has never been and is not currently pregnant
Nullipara- woman who has not carried a pregnancy beyond 20 weeks
Grandmultipara - woman who has had 6 or more viable deliveries, whether, the fetuses were alive or
dead.
OB SCORING
NAGELE’S RULE
Use to determine expected date of delivery (EDD or EDB). It is important to determine the mother’s
LMP.
If Jan – March = +9 +7
If Apr – Dec = -3 +7 +1
MC DONALD’S RULE
BARTHOLOMEW’S RULE
LEOPOLD’S MANEUVER
1st MANEUVER: Purpose: to determine the fetal presentation/lie through fundal palpation
If palpated a round, hard and movable – BREECH presentation
If palpated round, soft and immovable - HEAD/CEPHALIC presentation
2nd MANEUVER: Purpose: to determine the back of fetus to hear the fetal heart sound
If smooth hard and resistant surface - FETAL BACK
If angular nodulations - KNEES AND ELBOWS
3rd MANEUVER: Purpose: to determine the degree of engagement by palpating the lower uterine segment
o If the presenting part is movable: NOT ENGAGED
o If the presenting part is immovable: ENGAGED
HARD: HEAD
SOFT, GLOBULAR, LARGE: BUTTOCKS
4th MANEUVER: Purpose: to determine the fetal attitude –relationship of fetus to each part or degree of flexion
by grasping the lower quadrant of abdomen. It is done only if the fetus is in cephalic
presentation.
Full Flexion if the fetal chin touches chest
Social Influences
● The woman and her partner feel during pregnancy and prepared to meet the challenges: are
related to them:
a. Cultural background
b. Personal beliefs
c. Experiences reported by friends and relatives
d. Current plethora of information available
Nurse’s Role
1. Teaching the woman about their health care option
2. Continue to work with other health care provider to “demedicalize” childbirth
Cultural influences
● Cultural beliefs and taboos can place restrictions on a woman’s behavior and activities regarding her
pregnancy
● During prenatal visits, ask the woman and her partner if there is anything, they believe that should or
should not be done to make the pregnancy successful and keep the fetus healthy.
Examples: Beliefs
● Lifting the arms over the head during pregnancy will cause the cord to twist
● Watching a lunar eclipse will cause a birth deformity
Nurse’s Role:
1. Supporting these beliefs shows respect for the individuality of a woman and her knowledge of
good health.
2. Find a compromise that will assure a woman that these are not really harmful to a fetus but that
still respects these beliefs
Family Influences
● The family in which woman raised can be influential to her beliefs about pregnancy
● Woman and her siblings were loved and seen as a pleasant outcome is more likely to have a positive
attitude towards her pregnancy
● A woman who views mothering a positive activity is more likely to be pleased when she becomes
pregnant than one who does not value mothering
● Negative Influences - woman and her siblings were blamed for the breakup of a marriage or a
relationship.
Individual Differences
A woman’s ability to cope with or adapt to stress plays a major role in how she can resolve any conflict
and adapt:
a. To being a mother without needing mothering, to loving a child as well as partner
b. To becoming a mother for each new child depends on her basic temperament on whether she adapts
to new situations quickly or slowly, whether she face them with intensity or maintain a low-key
approach, and whether she had experience coping with change and stress
c. The extent to which a woman feels secure in her relationship with the people around her
d. Past experiences influence on how woman perceive pregnancy as a positive or negative experience
e. To being concerned about her appearance
f. To being worry that pregnancy will rob her financially and ruin her chances of job promotion
Nurse’s Role:
1. Assessing and counselling pregnant woman
2. Fill the role of an attentive listener
Partner’s Adaptation
● The more emotionally attached a partner is to a pregnant woman, the closer the partner’s attachment is apt
to be to the child.
Factors that affect the pregnant woman’s decision making:
a. Cultural background
b. Past experience
c. Relationships with the family members
The Woman
● Accept the reality of the pregnancy, later will come the task of accepting the baby, following their initial
surprise women often experience the feeling of ambivalence
● Ambivalence – refers to the interwoven feelings of wanting and not wanting feelings which can be
confusing to an ordinarily organized woman
● Most women who were not happy about being pregnant at the beginning are able to change their
attitude towards their pregnancy by the time they feel the child move inside
● Woman often comment after such visit they feel “more pregnant” or it makes a first visit more than an
ordinary one
● Early diagnosis is important because the earlier a woman realizes she is pregnant, the sooner she can
begin to safeguard fetal health by discontinuing all drugs not prescribed or approved by her health care
provider.
Health care plan:
1. Routine sonogram – to assess for growth anomalies and can be a major step in promoting acceptance
because women can see a beating heart or fetal outline or can learn the sex of their fetus.
2. First prenatal visits - hearing their pregnancy officially diagnosed at a first prenatal visit is another step
toward accepting a pregnancy
The Partner
● All partners are important and should be encouraged to play a continuing emotional and supportive role
in pregnancy
● Accepting the pregnancy for a partner means not only accepting the certainty of the pregnancy and the
reality of the child to come but also accepting the woman in her changed state
● Partner may also experience feeling of ambivalence
● Partner may feel proud and happy at the beginning of pregnancy
● Soon begin to feel both overwhelmed with what the loss of salary will mean to the family if the woman
has to quit work
● Feeling close to jealousy of the growing baby who although not yet physically apparent, seems to be
taking up a great deal of the woman’s time and thought
Health care plan:
o Prenatal visit or fetal testing – provide an outlet for both male and female partners to discuss concerns
and offer parenting information.
2. Second Trimester: Accepting the Baby
● Task: Accepting the baby - Woman and partner move through emotions such as narcissism and
introversion as they concentrate on what it will feel like to be a parent. Roleplaying and increased
dreaming are common
The Woman
● Psychological task of a woman is to accept she is having a baby, a step up from accepting the
pregnancy
● The change usually happens at quickening or the first moment a woman feels fetal movement.
● Woman who carefully planned the pregnancy, this moment of awareness may occur soon as she
recovers from the surprise of learning she has actually conceived
● She announces the news to her parents and hear them express their excitement and see a look of
pride on her partner’s face
● A good way to measure the level of a woman’s acceptance is to measure how well she follows prenatal
instructions
The Partner
● A partner may become overly absorbed in work, striving to produce something concrete on the
job that may limit the amount of time a partner spends with family
● Some men have difficulty enjoying the pregnancy because they have been misinformed about
sexuality, pregnancy, and women’s health.
2. Probable Signs (Objective Symptoms) – are findings and can verified by an examiner
o Chadwick’s sign - color change of the vagina from pink to violet
o Goodell’s sign – softening of the cervix
o Hegar’s sign - softening of the lower uterine segment
o Sonographic evidence of gestational sac
o Braxton Hick’s contraction – periodic uterine tightening
o Fetal outline felt by examiner through palpation
o Ballottement – the fetus can feel through bimanual examination
● Laboratory Tests – blood serum and urine specimen to detect the presence of human chorionic
gonadotrophin (hCG)
a. Serum pregnancy test – hCG appear as early as 24 – 48 hrs. after implantation and reach a
measurable level about 50 unit/ml 7-9 days after conception
b. Urine sample – concentrated such as a first urine in the morning
c. Home Pregnancy Test -it takes 2-3 mins. to complete and have a high degree of accuracy
d. Early prenatal care – is the best safeguard to ensure successful pregnancy.
To ensure adequate fetal nutrition, advise women not to diet to lose weight during
pregnancy. Weight gain will be higher for a multiple pregnancy than for a single
pregnancy. You can encourage women pregnant with multiple fetuses to gain at least 1
lb per week for a total of 40to 45 lb
Sudden increases in weight that suggest fluid retention or polyhydramnios (excessive Amniotic fluid) or a
loss of
weight that suggests illness should be carefully evaluated at prenatal visits.
Textbook:
Pilliteri, Silbert-Flagg. (2018). Maternal and Child Health Nursing: Care of the Childbearing and
Childrearing Family. (8 th Ed.) Wolters Kluwer
Devakumar (2019). Oxford Textbook of Global Health of Women, Newborns, Children, and
Adolescents. PB Publishing.
Murray (2019). Foundations of Maternal-Newborn and Women’s Health Nursing, 7th edition. Elsevier.
Flagg (2018). Maternal and Child Health Nursing: Care of the Childbearing and Chilrearing Family.
Wolters Kluwer
Wolters Kluwer. Audrey Berman, Shirlee J. Snyder, Geralyn Frandsen. (n.d.). Fundamentals of Nursing
by Kozier and Erbs (10th ed.).
Rosalinda Parado Salustiano. (2009). Dr. RPS Maternal & Newborn Care: A Comprehensive Review
Guide and Source Book for Teaching and Learning. C & E Publishing, Inc.