Maternal Child Nursing PDF
Maternal Child Nursing PDF
Maternal Child Nursing PDF
NURSING
MATERNAL-CHILD NURSING
Maternal Child Nursing (care of childbearing and childrearing
families: major focus of nursing practice
Nurse’s Role
1. Both preconceptual and prenatal cares are essential contributions
to the health of a woman and fetus and to a family‟s emotional
preparation for childbearing and childrearing.
2. As children grow, families need to continued health supervision
and support. As children reach maturity and plan for their
families, a new cycle begins and new support becomes necessary.
Although the field of nursing typically divides its concerns for families
during childbearing and childrearing into two separate entities, maternity
care and child health care, the full scope of nursing practice in this area is
not two separate entities, but one: maternal and child health nursing.
GOALS AND PHILOSOPHIES OF
MATERNAL CHILD HEALTH NURSING
The goals of maternal and child health nursing care are necessarily
broad because the scope of practice is so broad. In all settings and
types of care, keeping the family at the center of care delivery is
an essential goal.
Florence Nightingale The role of the nurse is Turn Terry‟s bed into the
viewed as changing or sunlight; provide
structuring elements of adequate covers for
the environment such warmth; leave her
as ventilation, comfortable with
temperature , odors, electronic games to
noise , and light to put occupy her time.
the patient into the best
opportunity for
recovery.
Rosemarie Rizzo Parse Nursing is a human science. Ask Terry what being sick
Health is a lived means to her. Allow her
experience. Man-living- to participate in care
health as a single unit decisions based on her
guides practice. response.
Sister Callista Roy The role of the nurse is to Assess Terry‟s ability to use
aid clients to adapt to her left hand to replace
the change on the her right-hand
degree of environment functions, which are
change and state of now lost; direct nursing
coping ability; full care toward replacing
adaptation includes deficit with other
physiologic factors, self-concept,
interdependence. role function, and skills.
PHASES OF HEALTH CARE
1. Health promotion: educating clients to be aware of good health
through health teaching and role modelling. Example: Teaching
women the importance of rubella immunization before
pregnancy; teaching children the importance of safer sex
practice
2. Health maintenance: intervening to maintain health when risk
of illness is present. Example: Encouraging women to come for
prenatal care; teaching parents the importance of safeguarding
their home by childproofing it against poisoning
3. Health restoration: promptly diagnosing and treating illness
using interventions that will return client to wellness most
rapidly. Example: Caring for a woman during a complication of
pregnancy or a child during an acute illness.
4. Health rehabilitation: preventing further complications from an
illness; bringing ill client back to optimal state of wellness or
helping client to accept inevitable death. Example: Encouraging
a woman with gestational trophoblastic disease to continue
therapy or a child with a renal transplant to continue to take
necessary medications.
Application of Nursing
Theories
Situation:
Neonatal death rate: The number of deaths per 1000 live births
occurring at birth or in the first 28 days of life. The first 28 days of
life are known as the neonatal period, and an infant during this time
is known as the neonate. The leading causes of infant mortality
during the first four weks of life are prematurity (early gestational
age), low birth weight (less than 2500 g) and congenital
anomalies.wwt 28 days
Perinatal death rate: The number of deaths of fetus more than 500
g and in the first 28 days of life per 1000 live births. It is the sum of
the fetal and neonatl rates. Perinatal period is the time beginning
when the fetus reaches 500 g 9about week 20 of pregnancy) and
ending about 4 to 6 weeks after birth.
MEASURING MATERNAL AND
CHILD HEALTH
Maternal mortality rate: The number of maternal deaths per
100,000 live births that occur as direct result of the reproductive
process. For most of the 20th century, uterine hemorrhage and
infection were the leading causes of death during pregnancy and
childbirth. This has changed because of the increased ability to
prevent or control hemorrhage and infection, and now
hypertensive disorders are the leading causes of death in
childbirth.
MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH CARE HAS BOTH LEGAL AND ETHICAL
CONSIDERATIONS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OVER AND ABOVE THOSE
IN OTHER AREAS OF PRACTICE BECAUSE OF THE ROLE OF THE FETUS
AND CHILD.