Section I: Introduction
Chapter 1: How to Use This Book
Section II: Generic Care Plans
Chapter 2: Nursing Care Plans (Generic)
Chapter 3: Collaborative Care Plans (Generic)
Section III: Antepartum Care
Chapter 4: Normal Pregnancy
Chapter 5: Pregnancy Complicated by Medical and Other Complications
Chapter 6: Gestational Complications
Section IV: Intrapartum Care
Chapter 7: Normal Intrapartum
Chapter 8: Intrapartum Complications
Section V: Postpartum Care
Chapter 9: Normal Postpartum Care
Chapter 10: Postpartum Complications
Section VI: Care of the Newborn
Chapter 11: Normal Newborn Care
Chapter 12: Neonatal Complications
,Chapter 1: How to Use This Book
Question 1 [MCQ – Recall]
Within the nursing process framework used in maternal-newborn nursing care plans,
which step is concerned primarily with establishing measurable patient-centered goals
and selecting outcome criteria before interventions are carried out?
A. Assessment
B. Diagnosis
C. Planning
D. Evaluation
Answer: C. Planning
Rationale:
Planning is the phase of the nursing process in which the nurse translates identified
nursing diagnoses into prioritized goals, expected outcomes, and an organized plan of
care. In maternal-newborn nursing, this step is especially important because care must
often anticipate rapid physiologic change in both mother and infant, making outcome
formulation central to safe practice. The planning phase links diagnostic judgment to
action by identifying what the nurse wants to achieve, how progress will be measured,
and which nursing interventions are most appropriate. Without a well-developed
planning phase, implementation becomes task-focused rather than outcome-directed,
which weakens the clinical usefulness of the care plan.
Question 2 [MCQ – Recall]
A correctly written NANDA-style nursing diagnostic statement includes which core
components?
A. Medical diagnosis, pharmacologic treatment, expected discharge date
B. Diagnostic label, related factors, defining characteristics
C. Assessment findings, physician orders, nursing notes
D. Problem list, laboratory values, evaluation summary
Answer: B. Diagnostic label, related factors, defining characteristics
Rationale:
A NANDA-style nursing diagnosis is structured to communicate a clinical nursing
judgment about a patient’s response to a health condition or life process. The core
,components are the diagnostic label, the related factors that explain contributing or
causative influences, and the defining characteristics that support the presence of the
problem when the diagnosis is actual. This structure promotes accuracy and consistency
in nursing communication and helps ensure that interventions are directed toward
modifiable patient responses rather than the underlying medical disorder itself. In
maternal-newborn care, this distinction is essential because many nursing priorities
involve adaptation, coping, knowledge, pain, safety, and physiologic stability rather than
disease labeling alone.
Question 3 [MCQ – Recall]
Which statement best defines a potential nursing problem as used in maternal-newborn
care planning?
A. A confirmed patient response demonstrated by present defining characteristics
B. A nursing problem that requires no assessment data before intervention
C. A clinical judgment about a problem the patient is vulnerable to developing
D. A complication managed only through physician-prescribed treatment
Answer: C. A clinical judgment about a problem the patient is vulnerable to
developing
Rationale:
A potential nursing problem, often expressed as a risk diagnosis, identifies a situation in
which the patient has not yet developed the problem but has recognized risk factors
that increase vulnerability. In maternal-newborn nursing, this anticipatory focus is critical
because rapid shifts in condition can occur during pregnancy, labor, postpartum
recovery, or neonatal transition. Risk diagnoses guide preventive surveillance, education,
and protective interventions before defining characteristics emerge. This approach
reflects the preventive and safety-oriented nature of the nursing process, allowing
nurses to reduce morbidity through early recognition and proactive care rather than
waiting for deterioration.
Question 4 [MCQ – Recall]
Within the care plan format used in this textbook, expected outcomes are best
understood as:
,A. Broad philosophical statements about ideal maternal-newborn health
B. Measurable patient responses used to judge effectiveness of care
C. Lists of all interventions available within NIC categories
D. Physician goals that nurses incorporate into documentation
Answer: B. Measurable patient responses used to judge effectiveness of care
Rationale:
Expected outcomes are specific, patient-centered indicators that describe the desired
response to nursing care and provide the standard against which progress is evaluated.
In maternal-newborn practice, outcomes must often reflect observable physiologic,
behavioral, emotional, or knowledge-based changes, such as effective breastfeeding,
reduced anxiety, stable vital signs, or correct demonstration of infant care skills. These
outcomes make the plan clinically actionable because they define what success looks
like and support meaningful evaluation. The strength of a care plan depends heavily on
whether outcomes are realistic, measurable, and clearly linked to the diagnosis and
interventions selected.
Question 5 [MCQ – Comprehension]
Which statement best explains the purpose of NIC within a maternal-newborn nursing
care plan?
A. It replaces nursing diagnoses by standardizing all patient problems under treatment
categories
B. It provides a standardized language for naming and organizing nursing interventions
C. It is used primarily to document collaborative medical complications rather than
nursing actions
D. It limits nursing care to only those interventions supported by physician orders
Answer: B. It provides a standardized language for naming and organizing nursing
interventions
Rationale:
NIC, or Nursing Interventions Classification, provides a standardized taxonomy for
describing nursing actions in a consistent and organized manner. Its function within
maternal-newborn care planning is to support accurate communication, documentation,
teaching, and evaluation of nursing care by linking diagnoses to evidence-informed
intervention strategies. Standardized intervention language is especially helpful in
maternal-newborn settings, where care must be individualized while remaining
,systematic and defensible across varied clinical situations. NIC does not narrow nursing
judgment; rather, it supports it by helping nurses document selected interventions
clearly and connect them to expected maternal or neonatal outcomes.
Question 6 [MCQ – Comprehension]
Why is assessment data the essential basis for individualizing a generic maternal-
newborn nursing care plan?
A. Generic plans are designed to eliminate the need for repeated patient assessment
B. Assessment findings identify which diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes are
clinically relevant for the individual patient
C. Assessment is used mainly to confirm whether the physician’s diagnosis is accurate
D. Individualization occurs only during evaluation, after the patient has responded to
treatment
Answer: B. Assessment findings identify which diagnoses, interventions, and
outcomes are clinically relevant for the individual patient
Rationale:
A generic care plan provides a structured starting framework, but it becomes clinically
meaningful only when adapted to the patient’s actual assessment findings. In maternal-
newborn nursing, no two patients present with identical physiologic, psychosocial,
developmental, cultural, and educational needs, even when they share the same broad
clinical condition. Assessment allows the nurse to determine the patient’s priorities,
strengths, risks, symptoms, learning needs, and responses, thereby guiding which
diagnoses apply and which interventions should be emphasized or modified. This
preserves the integrity of the nursing process by ensuring that care is not formulaic, but
responsive to the individual maternal-newborn situation.
Question 7 [MCQ – Comprehension]
Which statement best distinguishes a collaborative care plan from a nursing care plan?
A. A collaborative care plan focuses only on psychosocial needs, whereas a nursing care
plan addresses physiologic needs
B. A collaborative care plan addresses problems requiring multidisciplinary
management, whereas a nursing care plan focuses on nurse-initiated responses to
patient problems
,C. A collaborative care plan is used only in intensive care settings, whereas a nursing
care plan is used on routine units
D. A collaborative care plan documents only physician interventions, whereas a nursing
care plan documents only independent nursing interventions
Answer: B. A collaborative care plan addresses problems requiring
multidisciplinary management, whereas a nursing care plan focuses on nurse-
initiated responses to patient problems
Rationale:
Collaborative care plans are used when patient care involves shared accountability
among multiple disciplines, particularly in the prevention, monitoring, and management
of complications that extend beyond independent nursing treatment alone. In maternal-
newborn nursing, examples include surveillance for hemorrhage, infection, hypertensive
crises, or fetal compromise, all of which require coordinated communication and
intervention. Nursing care plans, in contrast, focus on human responses that nurses
identify and address through the nursing process, even though some interventions may
overlap with collaborative management. The distinction is not absolute separation but
difference in emphasis: nurse-initiated care versus interprofessional management of
complex or potential complications.
Question 8 [MCQ – Comprehension]
Evidence-based practice is integrated into the care plan format primarily to ensure that:
A. The most traditional maternal-newborn routines are preserved regardless of new
findings
B. Nursing interventions are selected on the basis of current knowledge, clinical
reasoning, and patient needs
C. Nursing diagnoses are replaced by research summaries in the plan of care
D. Only interventions supported by randomized trials may be implemented in practice
Answer: B. Nursing interventions are selected on the basis of current knowledge,
clinical reasoning, and patient needs
Rationale:
Evidence-based practice strengthens the maternal-newborn care plan by aligning
nursing decisions with the best available knowledge, professional judgment, and
individualized patient circumstances. In practical terms, this means that interventions are
not chosen merely because they are customary, but because they are supported by
, sound clinical reasoning and relevant evidence regarding effectiveness, safety, and
patient outcomes. Maternal-newborn nursing often involves balancing physiologic
evidence, developmental considerations, and patient preferences, so evidence-based
care planning helps ensure that decisions remain current and defensible. The care plan
thus becomes not just a documentation tool, but an evidence-informed roadmap for
high-quality nursing care.
Question 9 [MCQ – Application]
A postpartum patient reports intense perineal pain, rates it 8/10, winces during
repositioning, and avoids infant care because movement worsens discomfort. Which
nursing diagnosis is most directly supported by these data?
A. Risk for infection related to perineal trauma
B. Deficient knowledge related to postpartum self-care
C. Acute pain related to tissue trauma as evidenced by verbal report and guarding
behavior
D. Ineffective coping related to role transition as evidenced by limited infant interaction
Answer: C. Acute pain related to tissue trauma as evidenced by verbal report and
guarding behavior
Rationale:
This assessment profile supports an actual nursing diagnosis because defining
characteristics are present: the patient reports severe pain, demonstrates guarding
behavior, and limits movement and caregiving because of discomfort. The diagnostic
statement appropriately identifies the problem, links it to a plausible related factor—
tissue trauma—and includes defining characteristics that justify the diagnosis. In
maternal-newborn care, accurate diagnosis is essential because interventions differ
significantly between pain management, infection prevention, education, and
psychosocial support. By identifying acute pain correctly, the nurse can proceed with
targeted NIC interventions such as pain assessment, positioning, pharmacologic
management, and evaluation of functional improvement.
Question 10 [MCQ – Application]
A nurse is using a generic care plan for “Deficient Knowledge” with a primigravida
patient in the third trimester. Which action best demonstrates appropriate
individualization of that plan?