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Re: Third stage, how long?From: ainsron (ainsron@sbcglobal.net)Thu Jun 22 19:24:43 2006
One of the reasons the nurses try to get the weight taken as soon as possible is because I (and by assumption other physicians, CNMs) need the data to complete our work. For example, I dictate my delivery notes. For them to be complete, I need the birth weight, Apgar score, delivery time. When I leave the delivery room or shortly afterwards, I want that information in my hand so that I'm not sitting around waiting or dictating multiple blanks in the note to be filled in later. On the other hand, I think it is important to place the baby on Mom's tummy after the baby is born, I always offer it, unless there are concerns about the baby such as meconium and the pediatrician is present to evaluate the baby. I always offer the DAD a chance to cut the cord after I clamp it, but I don't think there is credible evidence that the timing of cord clamping and cutting matters. Breast feeding immediately is always an option we support, but most babies aren't in a great hurry to latch on. Delaying the Emycin, bath, etc. is something the nursing staff is always willing to work with patient on and individualize. I guess I am still somewhat of a dinosaur on nasal suctioning and try to suction on the perineum, unless the baby comes out screaming before his chest delivers. Ronald E. Ainsworth, MD, FACOG -----Original Message----- From: ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net [mailto:ob-gyn-l@obgyn.net] On Behalf Of Jamie Sent: Thursday, June 22, 2006 3:54 PM To: Multiple recipients of list OB-GYN-L Subject: Re: Third stage, how long? Good point. And re your previous post-healthcare is just as stuck on "that's what we've always done" as any other business. Nurses are more likely to be open to "allowing" mom to hold her baby if the routine makes that less possible. The things that absolutely have to be done in the delivery room are stabilization and identification. Both of those can be done in the mother's arms (as long as baby is healthy), but if the nurses are also used to getting footprints, weighing, giving Vit K and eye ointment, etc. immediately (and expected to do so), they may feel that their work is being held up. If those things can be done a little later on, it frees the nurse to complete paperwork and monitor other laboring patients while the mother and baby spend some time together. It is very anxiety producing to think about all the work you've got to get done, while you sit and wait for someone to decide you can begin doing it.
At Thu, 22 Jun 2006, D. Ashley Hill wrote:
>
-- JFields, RN, BSN
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