1 / 12

Care of the Newborn

Care of the Newborn. Cheyenne County Hospital Childbirth Class Candi Douthit, BSN, RN. Initial Newborn Care. Initial Cares after birth: Ensure they are breathing well Warm, dry, and stimulate to get them crying really good Best for Baby: Immediate skin to skin with mom

lane-heath
Download Presentation

Care of the Newborn

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Care of the Newborn Cheyenne County Hospital Childbirth Class Candi Douthit, BSN, RN

  2. Initial Newborn Care • Initial Cares after birth: • Ensure they are breathing well • Warm, dry, and stimulate to get them crying really good • Best for Baby: • Immediate skin to skin with mom • Breastfeed within 30min to 1hr of life • Kangaroo care • Keep them warm

  3. Initial Newborn Care • Nursing Tasks: • Weights and measurements • Medications • Assessments • Apgar • Ballard • Blood sugar • Physical exam • Vital signs • Newborn care immediately after birth | BabyCenter

  4. Initial Newborn Appearance • Can be very wrinkly, pink, covered with a white, thick substance • Head can be cone shaped or swollen, may appear or be bruised • Skin: lanugo, milia, vernix, hands/feet may be blue purple • Eyes: mostly blue/gray • Pictures: Gift of Motherhood pg 65 • Infant will look much more normal in 12-24hrs

  5. Initial Newborn Appearance Acrocyanosis Vernix Acrocyanosis Milia

  6. Basics of Care • Feeding-every 2-3hrs • Hunger signs-sucking on hands, rooting, lip moving, crying is a late sign • Want to feed them before they are crying • Not just about eating, it is about bonding, interacting, and comforting • No bottle propping • Check water source if using formula • Burping-to be done after each feeding • positions

  7. Diapering • 10-12 times per day…>5000 diapers in a lifetime  (isn’t that great news) • Always wipe front to back (esp. on little girls) • Cord Care • Circumcision Care • Check before/after meals

  8. Basics of Care • Crying: • Comfort (hot, cold, lonely, scared, hungry, diaper issue) • Snuggling them in their blanket • Temperature Control: • Need to be kept warm, but not too hot • Temperature instability • SleepSacks • One layer more than you have on

  9. Basics of Care • Bathing • Every 2-3 days • Dry skin • No submersion until the cord comes off • Sleeping • 12-16hrs per day • SIDS Prevention Strategies • How to reduce your baby's risk of SIDS | Video | BabyCenter

  10. When to call the Doctor • Not eating well • Not peeing or pooping • Turning colors (orange, yellow, blue) • Temperatures (newborns < 1 mos should not be getting fevers and should be evaluated) • Not acting normal • Sinus drainage/cough • You are concerned

  11. Things to Consider • No ibuprofen/motrin until 6 months • No water needed • Call the lactation consultant if you are concerned about breastfeeding • Everyone will have advice for you, take it or leave it. Ultimately you are the parents and you’ll need to decide what is best for you and your baby.

  12. Things to Consider • Know there is no perfect way to raise a child. You will make mistakes and have regrets. Just do the best you can and pray often • You are now parents!!! What an incredible blessing this is. Take time to just be with your child as it will go very fast. Take a moment to cherish where you are in life.

More Related