This note discusses on certain complications pregnant women encounter during their pregnancy, labor and birth. Appropriate patient education is necessary in prepregnancy, ante partum, labor and delivery settings to address complications and risk factors that could harm the mother and infant during labor and birth. Several of these risk factors can be eliminated by proper patient education. Nurses are not simply health care providers and caregivers; they also functions as patient educators with a high obligation to provide patients and their family members with all vital information ranging from simple to complex health matters, preventive measures, nutrition, exercise and medications. Competent in patient education, nursing techniques, and client teaching, professional nurses are effective communicators and can help make a marked change in the clinical status of a patient. Below are a list of complications commonly seen in pregnancy, labor and birth. This note also discusses the nurse’s role in patient teaching with such complications.
Hypertension
High blood pressure (BP) or hypertension happens when arteries carrying blood from the heart to the body organs are constricted. This leads pressure to advance in the arteries (ACOG, 2014). In pregnancy, this can make it difficult for blood to reach the placenta, which provides nutrition and oxygen to the fetus. Low blood flow can reduce the growth of the fetus and put the mother at higher risk of preterm labor and preeclampsia. Pregnant women require education to allow them to monitor blood pressure, recognize symptoms of high blood pressure and management of hypertension during pregnancy (ACOG, 2014).
Women who have high blood pressure before they get pregnant could benefit from teaching on monitoring and controlling high blood pressure, with medications if necessary, throughout their pregnancy. Treating diabetes and losing weight as preventive measures for hypertension is important. Regular monitoring of BP and physician follow up is also necessary. Likewise, it is crucial to teach women to eat healthy during pregnancy, lower the use of salt, and perform regular exercises. If high blood pressure appears in pregnancy is called gestational hypertension (ACOG, 2014) and must be treated.
Preeclampsia
Preeclampsia in pregnant women is a serious medical condition that can cause preterm delivery and death (ACOG, 2014). It is marked by elevated blood pressure in pregnant women who have not had high blood pressure issues in pre pregnant state. The cause is unknown, but there are many risk factors associated. The risk factors include prior pregnancy with preeclampsia, first pregnancies, diseases of kidney, diabetes and hypertension in pre pregnant state, advanced maternal age, multiple pregnancies, and obesity (ACOG, 2014). The education process includes explanations of measures to control hypertension by diet, exercise, medications and regular follow up visits with physician. Women with risk factors need specific attention to control and treat high blood pressures during pregnancy. These women need instructions and reinforcements on the dangerous complications of preeclampsia, management of high blood pressure and diabetes, weight loss if obese, signs and symptoms of preeclampsia and when to seek emergency help if needed (ACOG, 2014).
Women who have had preeclampsia can develop seizures and risk of recurrent preeclampsia in future pregnancies. The condition can worsen and progress into hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets (HELLP) which can be fatal. Women should be instructed to report immediately if they develop swelling of face or hands, pain in upper abdomen, sudden weight gain, and any distress in breathing (ACOG, 2014).
Gestational Diabetes (GD)
Gestational diabetes is a clinical condition wherein a woman who did not have diabetes before pregnancy develops the condition during pregnancy (ACOG, 2017). Treating gestational diabetes by following a treatment plan established by a health care provider is the appropriate way to lower or prevent problems associated with high blood sugar during pregnancy. If appropriate blood sugar is not maintained, GD can progress to high blood pressure from preeclampsia and puts the mother at risk of having a large size infant, which advances the risk for cesarean delivery. Babies born to GD mothers are also at risk to develop breathing and jaundice. Hypoglycemia in the first day is a common occurrence in these babies. Large babies born to GD mothers can experience birth trauma, suffer from low blood sugar and require intensive care monitoring (ACOG, 2017).
Patient teaching should include assisting the patient to understand the disease process, education on home blood sugar monitoring, signs and symptoms of altered blood sugars, and how to manage it. Teaching on healthy diet and exercise during pregnancy is crucial. Regular follow up with the physician and compliance with plan of care needs to be reinforced shoud also be provided (ACOG, 2017).
Infections
Infections during pregnancy...
References
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). (2019). Preterm Labor and Birth. Retrieved from https://www.acog.org/Patients/FAQs/Preterm-Labor-and-Birth
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). (2014). Preeclampsia and high blood pressure during pregnancy. FAQ034. Retrieved from http://www.acog.org/media/For%20Patients/faq034.pdf/dmc=1&ts=20120730T1500377195
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). (2017). Gestational Diabetes. Retrieved from https://www.acog.org/Patients/FAQs/GestationalDiabetes?IsMobileSet+false
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U S Department of Health and Human Services. (2014). What are some common complications of pregnancy/ Retrieved from https://www.nichd.nih.gov/health/yopics/pregnancy/conditioninfo/complications
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