Routine postnatal care of women and their babies July, 2006.
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Transcript of Routine postnatal care of women and their babies July, 2006.
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Routine postnatal care of women and their babies
July, 2006
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Changing clinical practice
NICE guidelines are based on the best available evidence
The Department of Health asks NHS organisations to work towards implementing guidelines
Compliance will be monitored by the Healthcare Commission
Changes should be linked with other NICE guidance and relevant national policies
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The postnatal period
The guideline covers maternal and infant care in the period after transfer from intrapartum care until the end of the postnatal period. This is usually 6–8 weeks after the birth
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Need for the guideline
Common health problems in the postnatal period
Dissatisfaction of those receiving care
Creating services which are woman and family centred
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Aim of the guideline
Appropriate objectives, purpose, content and timing
Best practices and competencies for assessment
Information, education and support
Planning
Good practice in communication
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Essential principles of care
Kindness, respect and dignity
Views, beliefs and values
Women’s full involvement
All actions and interventions fully explained
Supporting informed decisions
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This guideline covers
Planning the content and delivery of care for woman and baby
Maintaining maternal health
Infant feeding
Maintaining infant health
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Planning content and delivery of care
Documented, individualised care plan
Written communication
Relevant and timely information
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Suggested actions
Local care planning documentation and use
Local protocols about written communication
Quality of local information provision for effectiveness and relevance to local community
Identifying the named postnatal coordinator within the care plan
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Maintaining maternal health
Signs and symptoms of potentially life-threatening conditions:
• postpartum haemorrhage• infection• pre-eclampsia/eclampsia• Thromboembolism
Emotional wellbeing
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Suggested actionsLocal protocols within
primary and secondary care
Continuous professional development programmes
Maternity and Care of the Newborn Competence
Frameworks
Clinical Negligence Scheme for Trusts (CNST) standards
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Infant feeding
Programme to encourage breastfeeding, using an externally evaluated structured programme using the Baby Friendly Initiative as a minimum standard
Support of breastfeeding initiation and continuation
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Suggested actions
Look at the UNICEF UK Baby Friendly Initiative which provides one possible framework for implementing an externally evaluated, structured programme which supports breastfeeding.
This can be used by NHS trusts, other healthcare facilities and higher education institutions
www.babyfriendly.org.uk
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Maintaining infant health
Information and guidance offered to enable parents to:
•assess their baby’s general condition•identify signs and symptoms of common health
problems seen in babies•contact a healthcare professional or emergency
service if required
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Suggested actions
Distribution of ‘Birth to five’
Quality of local information
Named postnatal coordinator within the care plan
Maternity and Care of the Newborn Competence Frameworks
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Costs and savings Use NICE costing tools to identify recommendations with the greatest impact on resources
•savings– savings are linked to the reduction in the
incidence of certain childhood disease because of the protective effects of breastfeeding
•costs– structured programme that encourages
breastfeeding including training
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NICE into practice guides
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Access tools online
Costing tools
•costing report•costing template
Audit criteria
Available from: www.nice.org.uk/cg037
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Access the guideline online
quick reference guide – a summary
NICE guideline – all of the recommendations
full guideline – all of the evidence and rationale
‘Information for the public’ – a version for people using the NHS in England and Whales
All found at: http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG37
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Care pathway
Key components – maintaining maternal health, infant feeding, and maintaining infant health
Time bands – first 24 hours, first week and first 2–8 weeks after birth
Action levels – emergency, urgent and non-urgent
Includes – core information, core care and areas for concern
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Example: signs of thromboembolismArea for concern:
unilateral calf pain and redness or swelling
Emergency action
Time band 24 hours
Maintaining maternal health
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Example: routine immunisations
Core care
Time band2–6 weeks
Offer routine baby immunisations