The postpartum period refers to the weeks that follow giving birth. As a nurse, your role is to guide new mothers and develop treatment plans that address their unique risks and challenges. Included in this article are some of the more common NANDA plans for postpartum care.
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Members are discussing how to create a nursing care plan for a postpartum patient with a complex medical and psychiatric history, including substance abuse, domestic abuse, and suicidal tendencies. They are focusing on identifying abnormal data and symptoms to determine appropriate nursing diagnoses and interventions, with some users emphasizing the importance of considering surgical and anesthesia-related complications post-cesarean section.
For new mothers, the postpartum period comes with significant changes as they adapt to their new role and heal from giving birth. Potential mental health challenges exist as hormonal changes and other factors cause postpartum depression in 6.5% to 20% of women.
Many new mothers also experience anxiety around bonding with their babies or breastfeeding. One study reported that up to 50% of mothers stop breastfeeding their infants due to insufficient milk supply.
Complications can also appear following birth, resulting in severe health concerns and even deaths. The number of maternal deaths sharply increased to 1,178 per 100,000 live births in 2021 due to COVID-19, prompting birth centers to adopt new safety measures.
As a nurse, you can have a significant impact during the postpartum period. Frequent interactions with the new mother put you in a unique position to listen to her concerns and guide her as she enters a new chapter in her life.
Your role also encompasses watching out for symptoms that could indicate physical or psychological complications to address these issues early and improve the outcome with a relevant treatment plan.
As a nurse, you can also make a difference by developing a personalized care plan that reflects each patient's unique health history. When creating a care plan and delivering holistic care, one factor to consider is any existing health disparities in outcomes related to ethnicities and social backgrounds.
Unfortunately, some parents aren't ready to provide their babies a safe and healthy environment. As a nurse, you're usually one of the first healthcare professionals who are in a position to notice difficulties with bonding.
Impaired parenting
Becoming a good parent takes time. Readiness for enhanced parenting refers to the will to become a better parent.
The average age at which women have their first child is 23 years old, meaning that many new mothers face economic and social challenges on their way to becoming successful parents.
Readiness for enhanced parenting
The CDC reports that breastfeeding exclusively drops significantly over the first six months of life for many infants. While 83.2% of all infants start out receiving some breast milk, by six months, only 24.9% of infants receive breast milk exclusively. One explanation for this decrease in breastfeeding is that families who breastfeed lack the support systems needed to reach long-term breastfeeding goals. This research supports the need for care plan development for families who experience ineffective breastfeeding.
Ineffective breastfeeding
Infections are a reasonably common nursing diagnosis for postpartum women since this complication affects 5% to 7% of women who give birth. It's a severe complication that significantly increases the risk of maternal death and can cause additional anxiety for the new mother.
Infection care
A study conducted in Finland found that 83% of women giving birth for the first time used an epidural. While pain management is a crucial goal during labor and delivery, many mothers also need a pain management plan in the weeks that follow.
Risk for pain
More than 50% of Americans over 40 find themselves caring for aging parents and children. Welcoming a new addition to the family can be a source of stress that results in caregiver role strain for those who already have obligations.
Research shows that mothers of children under the age of two experience higher levels of fatigue, independently from the amount of sleep they get. Fatigue typically includes a lack of motivation, frequent drowsiness, and low energy levels.
Fatigue
Research shows that as many as 23% of teen girls suffer from low self-esteem. For many women, these feelings persist into adulthood and can lead to a severe situational low during the transition to parenthood.
Self-esteem, situational low
Postpartum hemorrhage, or an excessive loss of blood when giving birth, is a condition that affects 14 million women globally each year. Excessive blood loss can result in a deficient fluid volume diagnosis, a condition where the patient loses water and electrolytes.
Deficient fluid volume
Ineffective tissue perfusion is a potential complication that stems from postpartum hemorrhage. In some cases, severe blood loss results in a lack of oxygenated blood flow. Tissues and organs can die.
Ineffective tissue perfusion
An imbalance in mood and behavior can occur during the postpartum period. The pressure of assuming a new role can cause mood changes, but shifting hormonal levels and other physical symptoms can exacerbate these changes.
Imbalance in mood and behavior
Read on to learn more about common postpartum diagnoses.
It's normal for women to experience lady partsl discharge, incontinence, and changes in bowel movements after giving birth. Hormonal changes can lead to mood changes, breast tenderness, and other symptoms.
Three other nursing diagnoses you might use for a patient with postpartum hemorrhage include deficient fluid volume, risk for imbalanced fluid volume, and ineffective tissue perfusion.
A pre-existing health condition increases a new mother's risk of experiencing complications. Factors like age, weight, ethnicity and socioeconomic status can also play a role.
Learn more about postpartum diagnoses and nursing plans with these resources:
References
So, these are the responses, signs and symptoms you observed in this patient:
You have to remember that this lady has had surgery and although she is a pospartum patient, she is also a surgical patient. You need to go back to your med/surg textbook and review the care of the general surgical patient because it applies here. If she had general anesthesia, you need to be watching and monitoring for signs and symptoms of complications of general anesthesia:
If she had an epidural, you need to be monitoring for signs and symptoms of complications of epidural anesthesia:
In addition, you need to look up information about the cesarean section procedure itself. You need to be aware that the following are risks of this procedure:
When the abdomen is cut into and the bowel is in any way disrupted or touched, peristalsis which is a continual muscular motion in the GI tract, shuts down immediately. Ileus and nausea result. It takes a little time for peristalsis to get restarted and it takes several weeks for it to return to normal. If the patient's bowel was prepped (enemas to cleanse and empty the bowel), then the now quiet and motionless bowel fills with gas because of the normal presence of bacteria in the large intestine. The first symptoms you may see are a distended abdomen and nausea. When peristalsis returns, you assess for bowel sounds, the patient passing gas and finally having the first BM. One of your patient's symptoms is that she has gas. I have no doubt that some of her pain is related to the gas building up in her colon. When, I wonder was her first BM since her surgery?
Is this lady having any problems with ambulating? You didn't say. Usually with an incision like this women are reticent to get up and move around as they normally would which would warrant a diagnosis of either Impaired Physical Mobility or Activity Intolerance depending on the symptoms they have.
If she has pain and is getting pain medications and there are comfort measures that can be done for the incisional pain, the Acute Pain applies here.
To my way of thinking, an incision warrants a diagnosis of Impaired Tissue Integrity, but not everyone agrees with that. I worked on surgical units and this diagnosis was on every surgical patient's care plan.
I found it interesting that this patient desires to use contraceptives when she goes home even though she has had a tubal ligation. That sounds bizarre to me. Unless there is something I don't know about tubals, she doesn't need contraceptives anymore. It also tells me that she needs some teaching and information about the procedure and the risk of pregnancy. That's a Knowledge Deficit, tubal ligation.
You noticed that she wanted to hold the baby when the adoptive parents were in the room, fed the baby and changed his diaper. Do you suppose she has some separation or coping issues? I was thinking that she may not be ready to give this baby up. What do you think? It's also interesting that she knows the people she's giving the baby up to--keeps a tie to the baby for her, doesn't it? Decisional Conflict or Risk for Decisional Conflict?Wouldn't be the first time a mother changed her mind and might be having second thoughts.
Beyond that, unless you want to do some "Risk for" diagnoses for some of the complications listed above. I wouldn't address any of her psych problems. They are not what she is in the hospital for. This is an OB rotation and I'm betting that your instructor is going to be much happier if you address the OB problems which she does have.
Your nursing interventions address the symptoms that support each of the nursing diagnoses.
Thank you for all of this wonderful information! In my classes we have not yet gotten into the nitty gritty of surgery..I have only taken Adult 1 and surgery is covered in Adult 2. But this is great information for nursing implications. In response to your question, she is not really having problems ambulating. She walked around the unit fine with no pain but just some discomfort with walking. She was eager to get out of bed though to help with the gas. However I will look up which information I would need to have that diagnosis of impaired phsyical mobility or activity intolerance. I too find the contraceptive use bazarre but maybe she wants it to control her menst. cycle and other not so appealing symptoms. And you mentioned separation or coping issues...I personally don't think there were any. She is just like any other mom who still wants to hold the baby and care for him...and with her adoption agency they actually encourage this bonding time. The adoptve parents were fine with everything she wanted to do for the baby. When I was talking with her she seemed very ready to give the baby up and seemed very happy with her choice of adoption. And I think you may have misread some information because she does not know the adoptive parents personally but has come to know them through the adoption agency process. And I am starting to agree with you on not really addressing her psych issues. However, I did notice my clinical instructors writing down all the info for patient so it might seem a little weird if I don't address the psych issues since harm to herself or her children is a priority...and priority diagnosis are what we are supposed to be writing. I think that is one of the tricky parts...picking out the most important diagnosis. It just really bothered me how she tried to commit suicide during her pregnancy so I think I may write about pospartum depression for her. That would incorporate both the OB and psych issues. I cannot seem to find however an approved diagnosis that would incorporate that. Maybe Risk for Post-Trauma syndrome? Risk for Disturbed Thought Process? Or Risk for self-directed violence? Thank you for your help!
I am only going by what you posted. Of course, you saw and worked with this patient so know better what is going on with her. But, let me say a couple of things about a care olan. You want to address problems that actually exist. Don't knock yourself out trying to make problems (I'm referring to the psych issues) that didn't seem to really be an issue during her time in the hospital. Past issued and problems are just that--leave them in the past. Se's not suicidal now, so it's not a problem now, so it doesn't need to be addressed unless she made comments about suicicidal ideation or told you she had a plan to kill herself. It does sound like this lady might have some behavior issues, but who doesn't? I don't know that they are issues that you really need to address therapeutically. Treating psych behavior therapeutically involves going to psych books and looking up the protocols to treat and care planning them. It's like surgical nursing--if you haven't really been exposed to it (because it's very specialized), this isn't the time to start doing it. Her behavior from what I can tell isn't outrageous enough to land her in a psych ward. I worked med/surg for years and occasionally we would get a doozy of a psych patient with a medical condition exhibiting some full-blown psych behavior. The nursing interventions for this involved developing a specific plan of treatment that had to be strictly followed by all the staff if it was ever going to work to control the patient's behavior--that's what psych units do and they are very good at it. Inevitably, there would be staff nurses who would ignore the care plan and do their own thing and we'd be back to square one with the bad behaviors. I said earlier I would address her surgical issues (she may be playing down the pain she does have or she just may be elated the baby is out) which is not something only psych patients do and ob issues which she does have. I would look at this as an ob patient with a few psych quirks which don't need to be addressed on the care plan. The one creative thing about care planning is that you can interpret the data one way and I can interpret it another. What's most important is how are your instructors going to like your interpretation. So, keep that in mind. This is why I keep going back to the fact that this is an ob rotation, not a psych rotation.
Keep in mind that to diagnose any problem you must have evidence in the form of symptoms. If you are not finding them, and a hunch is not enough, either you are missing something in your assessment and you need to revisit what you are using as an assessment tool or the evidence just isn't there and the problem doesn't exist. There is some good assessment guidelines for all kinds of body systems, including mental health on this thread of allnurses:
Boy, am I glad we don't have to do care plans for OB!
Hello everyone,
I'm writing because I desperately need help with my diagnosis. I had a post term (40 wks and one day) client who was induced with pitocin and ruptured after receiving it. I formulated the following diagnosis- Amniotomy r/t induction AMB observation of pitocin being administered . The reason why I'm having difficulties is because she was AROM due to the Pitocin does it matter if it wasn't in conjunction with the amniotic hook. Can't you induce with amniotic hook and/or the pitocin? Is this a appropriate diagnosis?
Also I used this other diagnosis for my risk related to the administration of Pitocin. I was wondering if this diagnosis was appropriate for administrating Pitocin. Risk for impaired gas exchange r/t cord compression secondary to AROM and prolapsed of the umbilical cord. Please help.
Thank you
Cynthia
Some complications with it:
- Increased pain - the baby's head is now pressing directly in the cervix (that is if the baby is presenting that way)
- Possible early decelerations (head pressure on the cervical area)
- Possible variable decelerations (cord compression)
- Cord prolapse as you mentioned,
- There is always the risk for hemorrhage
- And anytime that some foreign thing is entering the body there is the risk for infection.
- There is the risk for increased stress on the baby related to cord compression and compromised blood flow & oxygenated blood
Now your question about hook versus pitocin:
Pitocin (oxitocin) is indicated for the initiation or improvement of uterine contractions, it can be tittered as needed, and you are not pushing the baby out, you are increasing/improving contractions (baby's are at risk for late decelerations when you increase contractions intensity/amount)
* Remember it will not dilate the woman or anything like that, will just increase contractions (look at your book and there is a table that they use based on stage and dilation that will or not qualify the woman for pitocin. I just forgot the name of the table *sigh*)
Now when you go ahead and poke a arom, there is no titter that is straight up pretty much done, now of course they plan that with dilation, stage, baby position and everything else, not to have an emergency on the table.
So then.... You can play will all that info that i gave you and come up with so many combos as diagnoses.
Risk for infection r/t amniotomy etc...
Risk for hemorrhage etc..
Risk for decelerations etc...
Dramaangel621
52 Posts
Thank you for your reply! OK so I read the care plan post and yes it is helpful however I already know most of the content. I am in my second semester of school so I am still having a hard time with the signs and symptoms part...Since sometimes the patient has no abnormal findings on examination. Her psych issues I found in the chart, I myself saw no signs of these issues but this is what I observed and know of her:
-her "Boyfriend" isn't there for her and appears unimpressed with him
-holding the baby and sucking her thumb and rocking at the same time (however I don't know if this is of importance)
-doesn't go to work and receives her support from wic
-lives by herself with the kids
-group b strep positive
-desires to use contraceptives when she goes home (even after her tubal ligation)
-c-section went fine with no complications and the incision is healing well with no s/s of infection
-reports pain around her incision site and grimaced when I felt for the fundus. I asked her what her pain was and she said maybe a 1-2 on scale of 10 at that time but later when I came in she was in no pain
-complains of gas
Other than that she has no abnormal symptoms. Everything on her examination was normal as well as the bubble-he part (breasts, uterus, bowel, bladder, episiotomy, homans sign, emotional)
I did notice how she wanted to hold the baby when the adoptive parents were in the room and even fed the baby with a bottle and changed his diaper. Again... Don't know if this is of importance since its not a bad thing since the adoptive parents were fine with it.
Hope this is the information you asked for.