Components of maternal care

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Components of maternal care

 

Components of maternal care

Antenatal care

Antenatal visits:

After conception or at 20 weeks, 32 weeks and 36 weeks. The services are –

  • History taking & recording (ANC & PNC card): General health status &
  • Physical examination: BP, weight gain, fundal height
  •  Investigation: CBC, Urine R/M/E, Blood sugar estimation, Blood grouping, HBsAg and others  (if necessary).
  • Iron & folic acid supplementation and other medication (if needed)
  • TT injection: For previously immunized, one booster dose of TT after 20 weeks is sufficient. If previously unimmunized, two doses of TT at one month interval between 16 to 36 weeks.
  • Education: About nutrition, self care, delivery & parenthood
  • Planning of delivery: If choice is home delivery, advice about importance of service by TBAs. If institutional delivery is choice, advice about pre-planning of transport, counselling of family members (if necessary).
  • Identify ‘At Risk’ Mother: Elderly primi (30 years and over), Stunted primi, Elderly grandmultipara, H/o previous C/S, Preeclampsia and eclampsia, Pregnancy with DM, CLD, CKD, TB & Hypertension, APH, Twin pregnancy, Hydramnios and Malpresentation.

II. Prenatal advice: adequate diet, maintenance of personal hygiene, careful to drug use & exposure to radiation, knowledge about warning signs (such as, edema of feet, blurred vision, convulsion, PV bleeding, headache) and child care.
III. Specific health protection: For anaemia and other nutritional deficiencies, toxaemias of pregnancy, tetanus, syphilis, Rh-status, screening for rubella and HIV (if necessary).
IV. Mental preparation
V. Family planning advice

 

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Intranatal care:

Domiciliary care through TBA:

Recognize the ‘danger signs’ and take immediate measure to transfer the mother to nearest PHC or hospital. The ‘danger signs’ are –

  • Sluggish or no pain after rupture of membrane
  • No progress within one hour after rupture of membrane in spite of pain
  • Prolapse of the cord or other body parts
  • Meconium-stained liquor or slow irregular or excessively first foetal heart beat) (
  • Excessive ‘show’ or bleeding during labour
  • Collapse during labour g. Retained placenta
  • PPH
  • A temperature of 38°C or more during labour

II. Institutional care: Recommended for all high risk pregnancies and unsuitable home delivery.
III. Rooming-in: Keeping the child’s bed at the side of the mother.

Postnatal care:

Care of the mother:

  • To prevent complications of post-partum period: Puerperal sepsis, thrombophlebitis, PPH, UTI, mastitis
  • Restoration of mother to optimum health: Through physical and phychological mprovement and social adaptation.
  • Breast feeding
  • Family planning and
  • Basic health education.

 

Components of maternal care

II. Care of the neonate: By Essential Newborn Care Interventions (described below)

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