Unfamiliar Words
Unfamiliar Words
Unfamiliar Words
1. WHY IS PRENATAL CARE NEEDED? WHAT ARE THE REASONS WHY YOU
NEED MONTHLY CHECK-UPS?
The fetus is most vulnerable during the first 12 weeks. During this period of
time, all of the major organs and body systems are forming and can be
damaged if the fetus is exposed to drugs, infectious agents, radiation,
certain medications, tobacco, and toxic substances.
Women who receive strong social support from their families during
pregnancy appear to be protected from sharp increases in a particular
stress hormone, making them less likely to experience depression after
giving birth, a new study by UCLA life scientists indicates.
3. IF THE PATIENT DOES NOT WANT THE CHILD, BUT THE PARENTS WANT
HER TO CONTINUE THE PREGNANCY, WHO WILL BE THE ONE TO
DECIDE?
If the patient is a minor, the parents will be responsible for the choice,
unless there is a risk to the patient or the unborn child; in that case, they
will need to discuss the situation and then decide whether or not to
terminate the pregnancy.
4. What happens at your first prenatal visit?
During the first prenatal visit, you can expect your doctor to:
At the first visit, you should ask questions and discuss any issues related to your
pregnancy. Find out all you can about how to stay healthy.
Later prenatal visits will probably be shorter. Your doctor will check on your health and
make sure the baby is growing as expected. Most prenatal visits will include:
While you're pregnant, you also will have some routine tests. Some tests are suggested
for all women, such as blood work to check for anemia, blood type, HIV, and other
factors. Other tests might be offered based on your age, personal or family health
history, your ethnic background, or the results of routine tests you have had. Visit the
pregnancy section of our website for more details on prenatal care and tests.
As blood pressure increases, so does the risk of heart disease. That's why it's so
important to control elevated blood pressure.
...
Try these tips:
1. Eat healthy foods. Eat a healthy diet. ...
2. Use less salt (sodium). ...
3. Manage weight. ...
4. Increase physical activity. ...
5. Limit alcohol. ...
6. Don't smoke. ...
7. Manage stress.
Some babies are small because their parents are small. But most babies who are small
for gestational age have growth problems that happen during pregnancy. Many of these
babies have a condition called intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). This happens
when the unborn baby doesn’t get the nutrients and oxygen needed to grow and
develop organs and tissues. This can begin at any time in pregnancy.
A nursing care plan (NCP) is a formal process that correctly identifies existing
needs and recognizes potential needs or risks. Care plans provide
communication among nurses, their patients, and other healthcare providers to
achieve health care outcomes. Without the nursing care planning process, the
quality and consistency of patient care would be lost.
What are care plans important?
Care plans are essential for the patient's recovery. They assist them in
developing and enacting a sound action plan by clearly defining the rules and the
nurse's role in patient care. This enables nurses to deliver targets without
skipping crucial stages.
A nursing care plan's objective is to record the patient's needs, preferences, and
planned nursing interventions (or implementations) for addressing those needs. The
care plan is used to ensure continuity of care and is a part of the patient's health record.
Prenatal Care - is the health care you get while you are pregnant. Take care of yourself
and your baby by:
Getting early prenatal care. If you know you're pregnant, or think you might be,
call your doctor to schedule a visit.
Getting regular prenatal care. Your doctor will schedule you for many checkups
over the course of your pregnancy. Don't miss any — they are all important.
Following your doctor's advice.
Get early and regular prenatal care. Whether this is your first pregnancy or third,
health care is extremely important. Your doctor will check to make sure you and
the baby are healthy at each visit. If there are any problems, early action will help
you and the baby.
Maternal Mortality – deaths due to complications from pregnancy or childbirth.
Perinatal Mortality – the sum of the number of perinatal deaths (stillbirths and early
neonatal deaths) divided by the number of pregnancies of seven or more months'
duration (all live births plus stillbirths).
Cultural Literacy – being able to understand the traditions, regular activities, and history
of a group of people from a given culture.
Puerperium – the time from the delivery of the placenta through the first few
weeks after the delivery. This period is usually considered to be 6 weeks in duration.
Placenta – The oval or discoid spongy structure in the uterus from which the fetus
derives its nourishment and oxygen. It consists of a fetal portion, the chorion frondosum,
bearing many chorionic villi that interlock with the decidua basalis of the uterus, which
constitutes the maternal portion.
Decreased cardiac output – occurs when the cardiac output reaches a level of fewer
than 4 liters per minute. The patient demonstrates adequate cardiac output; the
patient will also be able to tolerate activity without symptoms of dyspnea, syncope, or
chest pain.
Generalized body swelling
Also known as: anasarca, edema
A general accumulation of serous fluid in various tissues and body cavities is
characterized by swelling of the whole body.
Intrauterine growth restriction, or IUGR, is when a baby in the womb (a fetus) does
not grow as expected. The baby is not as big as would be expected for the stage of
the mother's pregnancy. This timing is known as an unborn baby's "gestational age."
Furosemide belongs to a group of medicines called loop diuretics (also known as water
pills). Furosemide is given to help treat fluid retention (edema) and swelling that is
caused by congestive heart failure, liver disease, kidney disease, or other medical
conditions.
NCP
● Edema is swelling caused by excess fluid trapped in your body's tissues. Although
edema can affect any part of your body, you may notice it more in your hands, arms,
feet, ankles, and legs.
Deficient Fluid Volume may be related to a plasma protein decreasing plasma colloid
osmotic pressure allowing fluid shifts out of the vascular compartment, possibly
evidenced by edema formation, sudden weight gain, hemoconcentration, nausea,
vomiting, epigastric pain, headaches, visual changes, decreased urine output.