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Um, I hope my nurse doesn't stretch my lady parts when I'm in the second stage of labor! lol.... All kidding aside, the first thing I thought about was acute pain, maybe anxiety/fear (maybe depending on if she's primigravida or multigravida)? Risk for impaired skin integrity (she could tear as you suggested.)....
? I know you were trying to joke, but did I misunderstand something? I watched three lady partsl deliveries this week and the nurse had her fingers in the lady parts with each delivery. She said it was to help stretch things out.
If I am not understanding something correctly I would like to know.
Yes, I agree with pain, anxiety, etc. I have to decide which diagnosis is the priority and I find that difficult. Thanks for your input.
Yeah, I've heard of that but I haven't actually seen it done in my rotation. I was just putting myself in the patient's shoes with that joke.... I would think pain would be the priority because you can't get a patient to focus if she's in pain. My professors always teach about pain as the priority....
speaking from a stand point of a nursing student as well as someone who was in second stage labor a time or two...Your priority nursng diagnosis would be acute pain. Some of your interventions might be use of guided imagery, changing positions, providing patient with a focal point, helping patient with deep breathing etc.
I think you might have meant stretching the cervix. The lady partsl wall expands on its own. The nurse caring for a laboring woman can use her fingers to stretch and gently manipulate the cervix back over the presenting part, usually the baby's head, toward crowning. It may prevent cervical tear. Analgesia is not necessary, and this is a common practice in most of the world, where analgesia in labor and delivery is almost non-existant.
MyBrainIsFull
14 Posts
I am trying to sort between my nursing diagnoses for the second stage of labor. My instructors always say, "Think like a nurse. You're the nurse. What do you do?" Well, if it's second stage, I am helping the mom, encouraging her, telling when to push, using my fingers to stretch her lady parts, monitoring the fetus to look for crowning, notifying the doctor when to come in, etc. I understand the priority interventions for the most part. I just don't know which nursing diagnosis matches those interventions.
Any suggestions?