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maternal newborn and
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womens’health nursing
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th
7 edition
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,Table of Contents
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Chapter 01: Maternity and Women’s Health Care Today ................................................................. 3
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Chapter 02: Social, Ethical, and Legal Issues ............................................................................... 16
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Chapter 03: Reproductive Anatomy and Physiology ...................................................................... 35
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Chapter 04: Hereditary and Environmental Influences on Childbearing ......................................... 45
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Chapter 05: Conception and Prenatal Development ...................................................................... 57
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Chapter 06: Maternal Adaptations to Pregnancy ............................................................................ 68
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Chapter 07: Antepartum Assessment, Care, and Education .......................................................... 85
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Chapter 08: Nutrition for Childbearing ..........................................................................................102
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Chapter 09: Assessing the Fetus ................................................................................................ 120
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Chapter 10: Complications of Pregnancy .....................................................................................135
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Chapter 11: The Childbearing Family with Special Needs ............................................................ 163
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Chapter 12: Processes of Birth ................................................................................................... 173
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Chapter 13: Pain Management During Childbirth .........................................................................191
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Chapter 15: Nursing Care During Labor and Birth ........................................................................ 212
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Chapter 16: Intrapartum Complications ........................................................................................ 238
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Chapter 17: Postpartum Adaptations and Nursing Care ............................................................... 258
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Chapter 18: Postpartum Maternal Complications..........................................................................282
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Chapter 19: Normal Newborn: Processes of Adaptation .............................................................. 300
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Chapter 20: Assessment of the Normal Newborn........................................................................ 313
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Chapter 21: Care of the Normal Newborn ....................................................................................325
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Chapter 22: Infant Feeding ......................................................................................................... 346
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Chapter 23: High-Risk Newborn: Complications Associated with Gestational Age and Development
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. .............................................................................................................................................. 362
Chapter 24: High-Risk Newborn: Acquired and Congenital Conditions ........................................ 374
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Chapter 25: Family Planning ........................................................................................................385
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Chapter 26: Infertility ...................................................................................................................398
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Chapter 27: Women’s Health ...................................................................................................... 405
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, Chapter 01: Maternity and Women’s Health Care Today
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Foundations of Maternal-Newborn & Women’s Health Nursing, 7th Edition
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MULTIPLE CHOICE g
1. A nurse educator is teaching a group of nursing students about the history of
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g family- centered maternity care. Which statement should the nurse include in the
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g teaching session? g
a.
The Sheppard-Towner Act of 1921 promoted family-centered care.
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gb.
Changes in pharmacologic management of labor prompted family-centered care.
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gc.
Demands by physicians for family involvement in childbirth increased the practice of family-
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gcentered care. g
d.
Parental requests that infants be allowed to remain with them rather than in a nursery initiated
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gthe practice of family-centered care.
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ANS: D g
2. Expectant parents ask a prenatal nurse educator, “Which setting for childbirth
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glimits the amount of parent–infant interaction?” Which answer should the nurse
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g provide for these parents in order to assist them in choosing an appropriate birth
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g setting?
a.
Birth center g
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Home birth g
gc.
Traditional hospital birth g g
gd.
Labor, birth, and recovery room
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gANS: C g
In the traditional hospital setting, the mother may see the infant for only short feeding periods,
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gand the infant is cared for in a separate nursery. Birth centers are set up to allow an increase
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gin parent–infant contact. Home births allow the greatest amount of parent–infant contact. The
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glabor, birth, recovery, and postpartum room setting allows for increased parent–infant contact.
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gDIF: Cognitive Level: Understanding OBJ: Nursing Process Step: Planning
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MSC: Patient Needs: Health Promotion and Maintenance
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