maternity & women’s health care, 11th
edition
by lowdermilk||complete chapters 1-
37||100% verified asnwers
,table of contents
chapter 01: 21st century maternity and women’s health nursing ........4
chapter 02: community care: the family and culture ......................... 24
chapter 03: nursing and genomics .................................................... 48
chapter 04: assessment and health promotion ................................. 66
chapter 05: violence against women ................................................ 97
chapter 06: reproductive system concerns ...................................... 117
chapter 07: sexually transmitted and other infections..................... 138
chapter 08: contraception and abortion ......................................... 160
chapter 09: infertility ..................................................................... 187
chapter 10: problems of the breast ................................................. 210
chapter 11: structural disorders and neoplasms of the reproductive
system ........................................................................................... 233
chapter 12: conception and fetal development ............................... 252
chapter 13: anatomy and physiology of pregnancy ......................... 276
chapter 14: nursing care of the family during pregnancy ................ 305
chapter 15: maternal and fetal nutrition ........................................ 344
chapter 16: labor and birth processes ............................................. 375
chapter 17: maximizing comfort for the laboring woman ................ 399
chapter 18: fetal assessment during labor ...................................... 431
chapter 19: nursing care of the family during labor and birth .......... 463
chapter 20: postpartum physiologic changes .................................. 504
chapter 21: nursing care of the family during the postpartum period
...................................................................................................... 525
,chapter 22: transmition to parenthood ........................................... 549
chapter 23: physiologic and behavioral adaptations of the newborn
...................................................................................................... 576
chapter 24: nursing care of the newborn and family ....................... 613
chapter 25: newborn nutrition and feeding .................................... 642
chapter 26: assessment of high risk pregnancy ............................... 672
chapter 27: hypertensive disorders ................................................. 698
chapter 28: hemorrhagic disorders ................................................. 718
chapter 29: endocrine and metabolic disorders ............................... 742
chapter 30: medical-surgical disorders ........................................... 763
chapter 31: mental health disorders and substance abuse .............. 786
chapter 32: labor and birth complications ...................................... 801
chapter 33: postpartum complications ........................................... 827
chapter 34: nursing care of the high risk newborn .......................... 844
chapter 35: acquired problems of the newborn ............................... 869
chapter 36: hemolytic disorders and congenital anomalies ............. 887
chapter 37: perinatal loss, bereavement, and grief ......................... 901
, chapter 01: 21st century maternity and women’s health nursing
lowdermilk: maternity & women’s health care, 11th edition
multiple choice
1. in evaluating the level of a pregnant woman‘s risk of having a
low-birth-weight (lbw) infant, which factor is the most important for
the nurse to consider?
a. african-american race
b. cigarette smoking
c. poor nutritional status
d. limited maternal education
answer>>a
for african-american births, the incidence of lbw infants is twice that
of caucasian births. race is a nonmodifiable risk factor. cigarette
smoking is an important factor in potential infant mortality rates, but
it is not the most important. additionally, smoking is a modifiable risk
factor. poor nutrition is an important factor in potential infant
mortality rates, but it is not the most important. additionally,
nutritional status is a modifiable risk factor. maternal education is an
important factor in potential infant mortality rates, but it is not the
most important. additionally, maternal education is a modifiable risk
factor.
dif: cognitive level: understand ref: p. 6 top: nursing process:
assessment