Sep 09, 2005, 07:09 PM
It used to be that the Level I, II, or III applied to the nursery, not L&D. Has that changed? Mother is the best infant transporter known, so when a baby is likely to need specialized care after it is born, ideally it is transported to a hospital with a higher level nursery while it is still inside.
Level III hospitals have NICU's that can care for the smallest and the sickest of babies. Level II nurseries can care for premature and sick infants, Level I can take care of healthy term newborns. At my current hospital, a Level I, we transport anyone less than 35-36 weeks (who's preterm labor we can't stop), anyone with known fetal anomalies, anyone whose baby is likely to need specialized care.
We run Mag for PTL and for PIH. If we cant stop the labor, or if the PIH is likely to require that the baby be delivered early, we transport, but term preeclamptics can stay.
We can run IV's on our babes and O2 (since we're more than a mile above sea level, we run a lot of O2, and those babies are allowed to be in the room with mom with O2 and a pulse oximeter--but that's a discussion from another thread). But if they need more than that, or if we can't wean them off O2 in a couple of days, they go to a higher level facility.
|
Nursing News