Maternal-newborn nursing care : the nurse, the family, and the community

Bibliographic Information

Maternal-newborn nursing care : the nurse, the family, and the community

Patricia Wieland Ladewig, Marcia L. London, Sally B. Olds

Addison-Wesley, c1998

4th ed

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Rev. ed. of: Essentials of maternal-newborn nursing / Patricia Wieland Ladewig, Marcia L. London, Sally B. Olds. 3rd ed. c1994

Includes fold-out pages revealing other illustrations and two folded sheets of perforated study cards

System requirements for accompanying computer disk: PCs running DOS 3.0 or higher with 384K

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Nurses working with childbearing families today face a variety of new challenges, including shortened lengths of stay, the trend toward greater use of community-based and home care, and downsizing and mergers of health care systems. Now more than ever, nurses must be flexible, and be able to think critically. Maternal-Newborn Nursing Care: The Nurse, the Family, and the Community (formerly Essentials of Maternal-Newborn Nursing) continues to emphasize the central role played by nurses working with todays childbearing families. *NEW- Chapter 29, "Home Care of the Postpartal Family," discusses assessment, teaching, and physical care of the postpartal woman, newborn, and family in the home. *NEW- Community-in-Focus boxes describe innovative community-based nursing programs in operation around the country. *NEW- Community-based nursing care and home care are described in key sections of the text to help students understand how therapeutic care of maternal-newborn conditions is given in the community. *NEW- Fifteen Critical Pathways have been added to address nursing care for women with complications and high risk newborns. The total number of Critical Pathways in this edition is eighteen. *NEW- Full-color format enhances visual learning of anatomic and physiologic processes and highlights key information. Dramatic photographs and personal reflections of childbearing women bring students closer to the childbearing experience. *NEW- A free student tutorial disk, packaged with each new textbook, includes 250 NCLEX-style questions with complete rationales for all possible answers. *Assessment Guides summarize assessment findings, alterations and possible causes, and nursing responses to assessment data to help students make distinctions between normal and abnormal clinical findings. *Teaching Guides help students assess common teaching needs in maternity care situations, create a particular teaching session, and evaluate the sessions success. *Discussion of client/family teaching is highlighted throughout the text by an apple logo in the margin. *Critical Thinking in Action boxes teach problem-solving and decision-making skills by asking students to determine appropriate responses to real-life clinical situations. *Essential Precautions in Practice boxes, integrated throughout the text, show students how to apply appropriate infection control practices in a variety of situations. *Key Facts to Remember provides a quick review of content crucial to effective nursing practice. *Procedures describe actions specific to maternal-newborn nursing care in step-by-step fashion. *Drug Guides describe the action, use, administration, and nursing considerations for the most important medications used in maternal-newborn nursing.

Table of Contents

I. BASIC CONCEPTS. 1. Contemporary Maternal-Newborn Care. 2. Reproductive Anatomy and Physiology. 3. Conception and Fetal Development. 4. Families with Special Reproductive Problems. 5. Womens Health Care. 6. Preparation for Parenthood. II. PREGNANCY. 7. Physical and Psychosocial Changes of Pregnancy. 8. Antepartal Nursing Assessment. 9. The Expectant Family: Needs and Care. 10. The Expectant Family: Age-Related Considerations. 11. Maternal Nutrition. 12. Pregnancy at Risk: Pregestational Problems. 13. Pregnancy at Risk: Gestational Onset. 14. Assessment of Fetal Well-Being. III. BIRTH. 15. Processes and Stages of Birth. 16. Intrapartal Nursing Assessment. 17. The Family in Childbirth: Needs and Care. 18. Maternal Analgesia and Anesthesia. 19. Intrapartal Family at Risk. 20. Obstetric Procedures: The Roll of the Nurse. IV. THE NEWBORN. 21. Physiological Responses of the Newborn to Birth. 22. Nursing Assessment of the Newborn. 23. The Normal Newborn: Needs and Care. 24. Newborn Nutrition. 25. The Newborn at Risk: Conditions Present at Birth. 26. The Newborn at Risk: Birth-Related Stressors. V. POSTPARTUM. 27. Postpartal Adaptation and Nursing Assessment. 28. The Postpartal Family: Needs and Care. 29. Home Care of the Postpartal Family. 30. The Postpartal Family at Risk. APPENDICES. A. Common Abbreviations of Maternal-Newborn and Womens Health Nursing. B. Conversions and Equivalents. C. The Pregnant Patients Bill of Rights. D. AWHONNs (NAACOG) Standards for the Nursing Care of Women and Newborns. E. Clinical Estimation of Gestational Age. F. Actions and Effects of elected Drugs During Breast-Feeding. G. Projected Recommendations for Isolation Precautions (CDC). H. Suggested Answers to Critical Thinking Questions.

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