
https://statstitch.etsy.com HIGH-YIELD CORE Maternal-newborn nursing requires addressing Social Determinants of Health (SDOH), substance use, interpersonal violence, and cultural disparities to prevent maternal and infant morbidity. The core priority is delivering culturally competent, trauma-informed care while assessing for high-risk complications.SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH (SDOH) SDOH, including poverty, racism, and unstable housing, deeply impact health outcomes. Black American pregnant clients face severe disparities, being three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than non-Hispanic White clients. Nurses must assess community resources and lead care coordination to mitigate these risks.SUBSTANCE USE & COMPLICATIONS Polysubstance use affects up to 50% of pregnant clients with substance use disorders. Assess all clients using trauma-informed screening.Alcohol: No safe threshold. Linked to Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD), causing lasting cognitive and behavioral challenges.Tobacco: Directly causes placental abruption, low birth weight, and Sudden Unexplained Infant Death (SUID).Opioids: Causes Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome (NAS), manifesting as high-pitched crying, hypertonia, and respiratory distress. Priority Action: Use the Eat, Sleep, Console (ESC) model, prioritizing soothing techniques over medications.Illicit Drugs: Cocaine and methamphetamines drastically increase the risk of preterm birth, preeclampsia, and placental abruption.VIOLENCE & HUMAN TRAFFICKINGInterpersonal Violence: Doubles the likelihood of delayed prenatal care and increases postpartum depression risk. Priority Action: Always ask open-ended screening questions in a private setting without the partner present. Use the HITS tool (Hurt, Insult, Threaten, Scream).Human Trafficking: Linked to severe perinatal complications. Priority Action: Report suspicions to a direct supervisor immediately.CULTURAL COMPETENCE & LGBTQIA+ CARERespectful Care: The AWHONN framework mandates care based on mutual respect, shared decision-making, and autonomy. Nurses must recognize personal biases and integrate the family’s specific religious and cultural beliefs into the plan of care. Use therapeutic communication, like "offering self" and active listening.LGBTQIA+ Clients: Face high depression rates and care barriers due to discrimination and stigma. Priority Action: Use preferred names and pronouns, obtain explicit consent for touch, and support alternative family-building.PREVENTATIVE CARE LEVELSPrimary: Prevents disease before it occurs (e.g., Tdap vaccine given at 27-36 weeks to provide the fetus passive immunity against pertussis).Secondary: Early disease detection via screenings (e.g., Pap smears).Tertiary: Treating known diseases to reduce severity.Quaternary: Preventing harmful medical treatments.
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OB | Newborn Complications

OB | PRIMER Newborn Complications

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OB | PRIMER Newborn Adaptations
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