Maternal Child Nursing Care Chapter 19 Nursing Care of the Family During the Postpartum Period
Suppression of lactation is recommended in cases of neonatal death. To suppress lactation, the nurse should advise the patient to wear a breast binder continuously for the first 72 hours after delivery. Running warm water over the breast stimulates lactation. Mild analgesics can be administered to reduce breast engorgement, but they are not used to suppress lactation. Administration of oral or intravenous fluids may stimulate lactation. - What intervention does the nurse perform to suppress lactation in a patient who had a stillbirth? 1 Run warm water over the patient's breasts. 2 Administer strong analgesics. 3 Administer oral and intravenous fluids. 4 Advise the patient to wear a breast binder for the first 72 hours after giving birth. 3 Lochia rubra and a firm fundus are normal findings in a postpartum patient. Because the assessment findings do not indicate a postpartum complication, the nurse should document the findings and continue to monitor. Because the patient has a firm fundus, she does not have postpartum hemorrhage, so prostaglandins and oxytocin should not be administered. Because the fundus is firm, massage is not needed to help the fundus contract. - The nurse assesses a postpartum patient and finds that the patient has lochia rubra with a firm fundus at the level of the umbilicus. Which is the most important nursing intervention in this situation?
Content preview
Written for
- Institution
- Chapter 19
- Course
- Chapter 19
Document information
- Uploaded on
- December 5, 2022
- Number of pages
- 26
- Written in
- 2022/2023
- Type
- Exam (elaborations)
- Contains
- Questions & answers
Subjects
-
suppression of lactation is recommended in cases of neonatal death to suppress lactation
-
the nurse should advise the patient to wear a breast binder continuously for the first 72 hours after deliv
Also available in package deal