Placental Transfusion for Neonatal Resuscitation After a Complete Abruption

by, Lisa-Marie Sasaki Cook, BSN, RNC-OB, C-EFM, ICCE, CD

In the potentially fatal event below, a cord blood infusion really put into practice everything we already know about delaying cord blood clamping – the increased provision to the neonate of oxygen, red blood cells, stem cells, immune cells, iron reserves, and blood volume.

It was wonderful was seeing this baby go home with no apparent sequellae after a complete abruption at birth. Continue reading

Intimate Partner Violence

Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)

by, Ann L. Bianchi, PhD, RN

What is Intimate Partner Violence?

Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) affects women of all ages, races, ethnic backgrounds, religions, educational levels, and economic levels. Abuse is inflicted upon a current or former partner or spouse, or boyfriend, or dating partner. Intentional behaviors are used by the abuser to induce fear, terror, coercion, and threats to gain power and control over the other person and the relationship.

Abusive behaviors, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, may include physical abuse such as: hitting, pinching, shoving, grabbing, pushing, being kicked, thrown, or shaken, even punched, slapped, or strangulated. Depending on the severity of the assault it may lead to death. Continue reading

Dangers After Delivery: Postpartum Preeclampsia

by Tanya M. Shlosman

Pregnancy is a complicated journey full of a multitude of emotions. A pregnant woman has an abundant amount of advice and resources at her disposal, but it can be overwhelming to swim through the information and decide what to take to heart and what to take with a grain of salt.

I spent my first pregnancy worried about everything. With every blood test, every ache and pain, I quickly referenced my What to Expect When You’re Expecting book to calm my concerns. When I was diagnosed with preeclampsia and my son had to be delivered almost 4 weeks early due to dangerously high blood pressure, I remember feeling afraid and uninformed. Even after I was told I had preeclampsia, I never felt my doctors did a good job of explaining the condition.

If you don’t know, as I didn’t, preeclampsia is a serious disorder occurring when women develop high blood pressure, usually in the last months of pregnancy. Preeclampsia affects as many as 1 in 12 pregnancies and can progress rapidly, resulting in seizures in its most severe form, which is called eclampsia.

Some years later, when I was pregnant with my daughter, I felt prepared and confident that I knew what to expect and what to do to keep myself healthy. I had some challenging days but made it to 40 weeks with no signs of preeclampsia.

While I had a very difficult cesarean delivery, I was relieved that my 8 pound and 15 ounce baby girl was healthy! However, within a few hours of delivery, I began to feel very sick. No matter what I did, I could not catch my breath and a cough set in. Having to cough after surgery is not a pleasant experience but I thought I had just developed a cold and was not concerned.

I soon learned that it was more than a cold. I had developed postpartum preeclampsia and this caused extra fluid to build up in my lungs—a condition called pulmonary edema.

I was not only afraid but angry—angry that I was not told that preeclampsia could happen after giving birth. Postpartum preeclampsia is a rare condition, usually occurring within the first 48 hours after birth but it can occur as late as six weeks postpartum. I endured breathing treatments and was given blood pressure medication while in the hospital and after being sent home. While my trouble breathing was the most frightening symptom, I also had severe headaches, dizziness, and blurred vision. I stayed on blood pressure medicine for almost six months.

What makes preeclampsia so frightening is that there are no tests to determine who will be afflicted with the condition. And there is no known method for preventing preeclampsia, no matter when it occurs. But there are known  risk factors. For example, women are at an increased risk to develop preeclampsia if they are obese, over age 40 or under 18, have a multiple gestation (twins or more), chronic high blood pressure or any kind of diabetes. Research shows that about twenty percent of women who had preeclampsia in a prior pregnancy will have it again with the next pregnancy. Pregnant women should talk with their nurse, midwife or doctor about preeclampsia and what their risks may be.

All pregnant and postpartum women should be aware of the symptoms of preeclampsia but especially women who have an increased risk to develop the condition. Symptoms are headache, excessive swelling, changes in vision, and upper abdominal pain. Women who have these symptoms should call their midwife or doctor right away. However, some women who develop preeclampsia will have few, if any, symptoms.

Every woman should reach out with concerns, no matter how small they may seem.

We need to talk about our experiences, support preeclampsia research and outreach to other women. I found a great source of information and comfort in the Preeclampsia Foundation, with its informational website and community forum.

May is National Preeclampsia Awareness Month and there is no better time to understand this condition and how it could affect you and your baby.

Some places you can start are Health4Mom.org and the Preeclampsia Foundation.

You can also see the 7 Symptoms Every Pregnant Woman Should Know videos in English and Spanish:
[youtube=http://youtu.be/P9GxHQzwIzk]
[youtube=http://youtu.be/UVjZItybNBI]

TanyaTanya earned her Bachelor’s Degree and did her master’s course work at the University of Louisiana at Monroe and work as an assistant director at a historical museum. She is a writer of non-fiction and poetry and currently working on a book discussing World War II. She is most importantly a wife and proud mother of two and several fur-babies.

Happy Nurses Week!

Phone 704-377-7662 email mitchell@mitchellkearney.comHappy Nurses Week!

As we near the end of this week, which celebrates nurses and also encompasses the day we celebrate moms, I want to recognize the impact you make on lives each and every day.

The work nurses do around the world, and the difference you make for women and newborns, is unmatched.   That is why we started this blog at AWHONN to tell your stories, your successes, your challenges, your joys and your heartbreaks.

Nursing is changing and evolving because of people like you—people who aim to provide nonjudgmental, evidenced-based care in settings that are busier than ever, with patients who have increasing health and economic challenges.

Every day we learn more about early stresses that influence newborn brain development in the NICU, newborn screening regulation, and the benefits of skin-to-skin at birth.  You continue to innovate and be flexible with each new discovery.

I am proud to represent each and every one of you and to celebrate you, your commitment to women and newborns, and your leadership in this rewarding but very tough profession of nursing.

THANK YOU for all that you do this week and every day,

Lynn Erdman, MN, RN, FAAN

CEO, AWHONN

PS. If you want have your story considered for the blog we’d love to hear from you. Make sure to fill out our Blogger Submission Form and we’ll be in touch.

Phone 704-377-7662email mitchell@mitchellkearney.comLynn Erdman is the CEO of AWHONN with more than 30 years of experience in the healthcare and nonprofit sectors. She is a highly skilled national leader in the field of nursing and previously held key national leadership positions with three global health organizations: the American Cancer Society, the American College of Surgeons, and the Susan G. Komen Global Headquarters.

Nursing…It Runs in the Family

Karen Harris and Andrew

Karen Harris and her son Andrew

by, Karen T. Harris, MSN, RN, WHNP-BC

I always knew that I wanted to be a nurse. From telling my mom that at the age of four to becoming the Vice President Patient Care Services and Chief Nursing Officer, Henry Ford West Bloomfield Hospital after nursing for 27 years, my passion for nursing and patient care has never diminished.

No one in my immediate family of eight children is in nursing, so when I had my own children I had no expectation that they would hold the same passion that I did. However, looking back I can see what might have led my son Andrew into the health care world.
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