Caring for pregnant and postnatal women in intensive care: What do we know?
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Brain death during pregnancy and prolonged corporeal support of the body: A critical discussion
2017, Women and BirthCitation Excerpt :Nurses and midwives are increasingly encountering care for the live pregnant but critically ill patient in the high dependency care setting, and given the ‘no gestational age limit’ at which corporeal support may begin,44 may encounter care of the BD body in which a fetus grows and develops. The difficulties high dependency nurses already face when caring for obstetric patients has been highlighted in the literature,45–47 but almost none examines what it is like to care for the woman/body, nor the fetus growing and developing for prolonged periods in an unstable and deteriorating and legally dead body. How nurses and midwives working not only in high dependency care units, but those working in neonatal intensive care units cope and care for themselves as they face the challenges of providing care sometimes for many months in this context surely deserves exploration as there are so many complex components of care to be considered.
Midwives’ experiences of working in an obstetric high dependency unit: A qualitative study
2017, MidwiferyCitation Excerpt :Whilst they acknowledge in the current context that intensive care nurses are more skilled to meet women's medical needs, the midwives were clear that their understanding of maternal and neonatal care and their capacity to nurture the mother-baby dyad is superior to that of nurses. The nursing literature reports that many nurses lack the knowledge and skills to provide ‘maternity care’ (Pollock, 2006; Kynoch et al., 2010). Both midwifery skills and high dependency ‘nursing’ skills are needed in the care of women (and their babies) admitted to an obstetric HDU.
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2022, Breastfeeding: A Guide for the Medical ProfessionCharacteristics and preventability of obstetric intensive care unit admissions in Far North Queensland
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