AWHONN is the primary source of evidence based practice information that Women's Health nurses use. In another post I will go over all of the ways that my hospital does not follow AWHONN guidelines in our practice, but for now I would like to chit chat for a minute about Fetal Monitoring.
I just went through a 2 day long Intermediate Fetal Monitoring course and there are so many things to discuss...
First, I was struck by how over and over we were looking a strip with the baby's heartbeat in the gutter when the pertinent information given about the patient was she "just had an epidural". Seriously, over and over. Post epidural women can have a tendency to become hypotensive because the medications often used in the epidural causes vasodilation of all of the blood vessels. When mom's blood pressure drops her body automatically shunts all of her blood to HER vital organs, namely her heart and lungs and in the process stops sending the oxygenated maternal blood to the placenta. Baby's heartrate will drop correspondingly. The hypotension can often be corrected by bolusing the mother with lots of IV fluids, calling anesthesia to give ephedrine (to increase her blood pressure), giving her oxygen so that her blood is now super saturated with O2 and thereby baby gets more, and repositioning her for optimal blood flow to the baby. BUT (and here is the clincher), those things don't always work. There are times where baby can never recover after the post-epidural hypotension and the patient ends up stat'ing back to the OR. Even if baby does recover, we have almost always just stressed that baby right out into passing meconium and into a NICU attended delivery where baby can't be placed directly on mom's belly.
I was so surprised that AWHONN recognized this, but I was shocked as I looked around the room at my coworkers and they just didn't get it. Really? Are you so pro-epidural that you can't admit that sometimes it causes an emergency c-section? That it sometimes causes prolonged fetal hypoxia? That it sometimes causes babies to stress out right back to the OR? Aaarrgghh!
I was looking around the room excitedly, hoping to see someone's "holy shite I get it now" expressions. And nothing. I really try not to preach at people at work. I like my job and I like my coworkers. I just don't understand how they just don't seem to connect the dots and make the decision to be the best supporters of natural childbirth that they can be.
All of that said, I am not entirely anti-epidural. With pitocin, with c-sections, with prolonged first babies, it is a really useful intervention. I also recognize that at a busy county hospital most of our patients get pitocin, artificial rupture of membranes, and are stuck in bed for the length of their labors. Le sigh. I can see the changes that need to happen, but I have no idea how to make that possible.
One other thing about this fetal monitoring course... Who knew that doctors aren't required to take any fetal monitoring courses? They make decisions for care based on a baby's strip and yet they have never had any formal training on it. They learned from the resident the year before them, who learned from the resident the year before them, and so on back for decades. Do they have knowledge of the latest information in fetal monitoring? I think NOT. If so, we would be able to intermittently monitor most of our patients, women would be allowed to walk during labor, and their interventions would decrease. They have to take CPR and NRP, why not fetal monitoring? I think that if the course was taught by ACOG and not by AWHONN, they would be on board. They just don't want to learn beside nurses and from nurses.
Friday, April 16, 2010
First Post!
As I am new to the blogging world, please bear with me here! This blog started because of my complaining about yet another crappy birth at the large county hospital that I work at as a L&D RN. I got a suggestion from a friend (as I was bitching away) that I needed to find an outlet for "all of this negativity" as she gestured to all of me with a wave of her balanced unangsty hand. Um, okay she might be right. I have always been a journaler, but to move into blogging from journaling was a way to say to the world, "SEE, this is what REALLY happens" and maybe along the way to change things a bit.
I love birth. LOVE IT. I have a hunger deep in my spirit to be carried along on the high of a laboring woman and to feel the clap of magic as a new soul enters the room. I have two muchkins Little Miss who is 8 and Bean who is 4. Little Miss was born at a large birth center with a CNM, and surprisingly I had a terrible experience with her birth. I had a long labor with little support from my midwife. After she was born, I became a doula because I didn't want other women to feel unsupported. After attending births for several years, I started to get hungry to do MORE. To have more autonomy, to have more skills, to help fix the bad outcomes that I had observed as a doula. Along the way, I had Bean in a beautiful homebirth filled with midwives and doulas that I loved. It was empowering and wonderful. When Bean was 18 months old, I started nursing school to get my Bachelors in Nursing. Now, I am nearly a year out of school and am working in a very large county teaching hospital. I would love to be a midwife, but my kiddos need to get a bit older before I can go back to school.
All names and identifying information have been changed and/or omitted in this blog. HIPAA is not being violated.
I love birth. LOVE IT. I have a hunger deep in my spirit to be carried along on the high of a laboring woman and to feel the clap of magic as a new soul enters the room. I have two muchkins Little Miss who is 8 and Bean who is 4. Little Miss was born at a large birth center with a CNM, and surprisingly I had a terrible experience with her birth. I had a long labor with little support from my midwife. After she was born, I became a doula because I didn't want other women to feel unsupported. After attending births for several years, I started to get hungry to do MORE. To have more autonomy, to have more skills, to help fix the bad outcomes that I had observed as a doula. Along the way, I had Bean in a beautiful homebirth filled with midwives and doulas that I loved. It was empowering and wonderful. When Bean was 18 months old, I started nursing school to get my Bachelors in Nursing. Now, I am nearly a year out of school and am working in a very large county teaching hospital. I would love to be a midwife, but my kiddos need to get a bit older before I can go back to school.
All names and identifying information have been changed and/or omitted in this blog. HIPAA is not being violated.
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