Re: Mother/baby organization
When you start working, you will have a preceptor to help guide you. During that time you will begin to get a feel for who needs to be seen first. If all other things are equal, I start with the room farthest away and work back to the desk. When you make your first rounds you will get a feel for who will need the most immediate assesment.
Some things that would be a priority: very young mom, breast feeding problems, fresh C/S, increased bleeding, mom not showing signs of bonding, history of drug use, patient with greater than usual pain. These are just a few.
I usually do my assesments of mom and baby at the same time. I hate to separate mom and baby. You can do a lot of teaching while you're assesing the baby. You can show mom how to do cord care, how to swaddle tightly and why to do so (babies like it), normal reflexes, the list goes on forever. I work nights and when I do my second infannt assesment, I usually do that in the room too. Most of the other nurses I work with will take the baby to the nursery for the midnight assesment. Recently I've rethought that position. In the morning, with the sun coming through the window I noticed that one of my babies looked like a carrot. I don't turn on really bright lights in the room at night during the repeat assesment, but I'm sure If I had or if I'd taken the baby to the nursery where the lights are bright I would have seen the jaundice sooner.
Anyway, good luck. You are not expected to be an expert immediatly. Use your preceptor, ask questions, ask for feed back, give your preceptor feedback about what she does that helps you learn and what doesn't.
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