Updated: Feb 25, 2020 Published Jul 6, 2008
wheart
10 Posts
Hi! I am doing my OB rotation and paperwork is 6 nursing diagnosis' for mom, and 4 for baby . My Care plan book that I have has nothing for maternity at all. Any help would be appreciated! Thanks ahead of time if anyone can help
Thanks again,
Wheart
tiggerdagibit
181 Posts
Which ones have you come up with already?
Daytonite, BSN, RN
1 Article; 14,604 Posts
you didn't specify whether this was a lady partsl birth or a c-section. I'll assume a lady partsl birth because a c-section is merely the added problem of the mother being a postop surgical patient.
there is information on the student forums in these sticky threads on how to write a care plan:
I answer care plan questions on the student forums all the time. I am a strong advocate of students learning to care plan by using the nursing process for the very problem you are having because care plan books only have care plans for the most common medical conditions encountered in the hospital and they don't include ob or psych. there is one care plan book for ob that I know of: maternal/newborn plans of care: guidelines for individual care, 3rd edition, by marilynn e. doenges and mary frances moorhouse. it costs $46 and may not be in publication anymore or another one has replaced it.
you will never go wrong if you follow the nursing process in writing a care plan. you will only falter in what you lack in knowledge to contribute to the assignment or a lack of where to find the knowledge. the steps of the nursing process as it pertains to care planning are:
everything for this care plan rests upon the assessment that you did. your assessment activities include the following, some of which you already did at the hospital:
keep in mind that in doing assessment it is important that you know what a normal response is supposed to be. the purpose of assessment when you are care planning is to look for abnormal responses because these are clues (evidence) that a nursing problem exists. that 4th bullet above tells you that assessment includes looking up pathophysiology, signs and symptoms and medical treatment for any medical conditions that exist. you are only going to know this by knowing what is normal about the process of labor and birth. much of that information should be in your ob textbook. and I will tell you right now that it is very rare that any labor and childbirth proceeds without any nursing problems.
close your eyes for a second and try to visualize a front seat view of a 7-pound baby coming through the birth canal. what's happening to those tissues in that mother's body! while birthing may be a "normal" process (right!) all that stretching and tearing of those tissues is not! those are injured tissues. what do you know about the pathophysiology of cell and tissue injury? it sets off the inflammatory response. you are not necessarily going to see the resulting signs and symptoms (redness, heat, swelling, pain) because these tissues are deep in the body, but I guarantee they are occurring. you need to think about the effect this has on the mother's body and surrounding organ structures.
there are also complications of birthing and any procedures that were done to assist the birth that need to be taken into consideration:
[*]pain of the lady partsl tissues
[*]bladder distension or inability to urinate
[*]infection in the uterus
[*]hemorrhoids occur during the pushing of labor
[*]hemorrhage risk
here are possible nursing problems (which you would need to turn into nursing diagnoses) that you would determine from abnormal assessment information that you had gathered:
the student forums on allnurses has a sticky thread that has assessment information and weblinks on it. there is a weblink to an assessment of a newborn there:
here are some ob weblinks that you might find helpful:
for the baby:
if the baby is under the bililight for hyperbilirubinemia the nursing diagnosis to use is
the underlined blue type are a weblinks to nursing diagnosis pages with nanda information and some goals and nursing interventions.