history and physical examination of the newborn

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History History and and Physical Physical Examination Examination of the of the Newborn Newborn

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History and Physical Examination of the Newborn. Our history should: Identify diseases that can be remedied with preventive action or treatment Anticipated conditions that are of clinical importance (eq. gonococcal conjunctivitis) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: History  and  Physical Examination  of the  Newborn

HistoryHistory and and

Physical Physical Examination Examination

of the of the NewbornNewborn

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Our history should:Our history should:

a) Identify diseases that can be remedied with preventive action or treatment

b) Anticipated conditions that are of clinical importance (eq. gonococcal conjunctivitis)

c) Uncover possible causative factors that may explain pathologic findings (eq. rubella syndrome babies)

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1. WHERE AND WHEN DO WE GET THE NEONATAL HISTORY?

2. WHO ARE OUR INFORMANTS?

3. WHAT ARE THE QUESTIONS WE NEED TO ASK?

4. WHY ARE WE ASKING THESE QUESTIONS?

5. HOW ARE WE GOING TO WRITE OR PRESENT OUR HISTORY?

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WHERE AND WHEN DO WE GET WHERE AND WHEN DO WE GET THETHE

NEONATAL HISTORY?NEONATAL HISTORY?

a) On admission of the pregnant woman to the labor room

b) During labor in the labor room

c) During the delivery in the delivery room or operating room

d) After birth in the mother’s room

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WHO ARE OUR INFORMANTS?WHO ARE OUR INFORMANTS?

a) The motherb) The fatherc) The OB residentd) The OB consultante) The anaesthesiologist

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General Data of the General Data of the Infant:Infant:

Birth weight, gestational age, intrauterine growth (AGA, SGA, LGA), type of delivery, race, sex, date and time of birth.

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General Data of the Infant:

Baby Boy Vasquez, Filipino, born by normal spontaneous delivery with a birth weight of 3010 grams, appropriate for gestational age, 38 6/7 weeks age of gestation at 3:10 AM on June 23, 2009

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Obstetric and Maternal Obstetric and Maternal History: History:  

Age; marital status, Gravida     , Para      ; blood type, VDRL/RPR (date and results), race, EDC.  Previous complications of pregnancy, labor, delivery.  Type of contraception used, if any.  Was present pregnancy planned?

Any pre-existing medical condition, drug use, alcohol intake and cigarette smoking, etc.

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OB and Maternal HistoryOB and Maternal History

The mother is a 35 year old Filipina G3 P2 (2002), Blood type O+. Expected date of Confinement: July 2, 2009.

G1 2002 Full term baby boy delivered by normal spontaneous delivery Birth weight= 3020g . Stayed in the nursery for 3 additional days for jaundice secondary to ABO Incompatibility. No other complications

G2 2004 Full term baby girl delivered by normal spontaneous delivery Birth weight= 2750 g Uncomplicated stay in the nursery.

G3 2008 Present pregnancy

The mother has no history of pre-existing diseases and denies drug use, alcohol intake and cigarette smoking.

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History of Present History of Present Pregnancy: Pregnancy: Location of prenatal care and number of visits.  Complications of pregnancy: Special test, ultrasound exams, stress tests. Medications - drug, dose, route, length of therapy, indication, when used during pregnancy. Any infection during pregnancy and medications taken

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History of Present PregnancyHistory of Present PregnancyThe mother has regular monthly prenatal check up since 2 months age of gestation and every two weeks from 37 weeks age of gestation. Vaginal bleeding occurred during the second month of pregnancy and the patient was given Isoxsuprine 10 mg tab every 8 hours for 5 days. There was no recurrence of the vaginal bleeding. Serial ultrasounds done during the prenatal visits were all normal. The mother had urinary tract infection on the 4th month of pregnancy and she was given Cefuroxime 500 mg tab, one tablet twice a day for 7 days. Urinalysis on admission is normal.

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Course of Labor and Delivery: Course of Labor and Delivery: • Labor spontaneous or induced? • Complications of labor • Fetal monitoring?  Fetal distress? • Rupture of membranes: artificial or spontaneous, hours before delivery, character of fluid. • Medications - including analgesia and anesthesia: drug,

dose, route, time prior to delivery • Duration - Stage I, Stage II, Stage III • Vaginal - or C-section delivery • Fetal presentation and position • Forceps used?  If so, state type and indication • Apgars 1 min / 5 min (Specify points lost at each) • Resuscitation: none; bulb suction; free flowing oxygen;

bag and mask; intubation, drugs used (dose and route)

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Course of the Labor and Course of the Labor and DeliveryDelivery

The mother had spontaneous labor 3 hours prior to admission. The course of the labor was unremarkable. Regular fetal monitoring showed no abnormal fetal heart rate decelerations. The membranes were artificially ruptured at 6 cm cervical dilatation showing normal amount of non foul-smelling whitish amniotic fluid without meconium staining. The duration of the stages of labor are within normal limits. The baby was delivered by normal spontaneous vaginal delivery on the 16th hour of admission under epidural anesthesia. Routine resuscitation was done and the APGAR scores were:

1 minute APGAR : 9 ( minus 1 for color) 5 minute APGAR : 10

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Course in the Transitional Course in the Transitional Nursery: Nursery:

VS on admission (including BP and temperature) Hematocrit Dextrostic Problems: cyanosis, respiratory distress, etc. Estimate of gestational age by Dubowitz - physical

score, neuromuscular score

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Family History:Relationship of neonate's mother and father (married, divorced, cohabiting, live apart, no contact maintained, etc.)Mother: amount of education, and is she employed outside of the home?Father: age, amount of education, occupation

Any illnesses or other problems in household members?

Any significant illnesses (physical, mental, growth failure) in other members of father's or mother's family?  If so, what?

Is there any disorder(s) in particular that mother worries her child might develop?

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Family HistoryFamily HistoryThe mother and father are presently not married but are living together alone in a rented apartment. The mother is  a  high  school  graduate  presently  working  as    a  sales staff  in  SM  megamall  while  the  father  is  a  college graduate working as a manager in a call center. There are no heredofamilial diseases in both sides of the family. 

They  presently  reside  in  a  rented  two  bedroom apartment  win  Taguig  with  potable  water  supplied  by Manila  Water.  The  two  other  children  share  one bedroom. The parents plan to put the baby in a crib next to  their  bed  in  the  Master  bedroom.  Presently,  their income can support their household expenses

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A.Stakeholder – person(s) other than the patient who have an impact (or interest) on the changes that need to happen to improve patient’s health.

B.Interest in Issue C.Role – position with regard to the

required changes: whether ally, resistor or bystander.

D.Level of influence

STAKEHOLDER ANALYSISSTAKEHOLDER ANALYSIS

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PERTINENT BELIEFS PERTINENT BELIEFS – underlying belief systems that have an impact on how the patient thinks, feels, and behaves about health; ex. Jehovah’s Witness and blood transfusion, or beliefs about bodily integrity in death and possible limb amputation, etc.

IMPACT ON FAMILY IMPACT ON FAMILY – psychological, social, economic impact of the patient’s disease on the family as a unit, and on its individual members.

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COMMUNITY FACTORSCOMMUNITY FACTORSA.Facilitating – factors that would help the patient achieve/restore/maintain healthB.Hindering – factors that would hinder the patient from achieving/restoring/maintaining healthC.Burden of illness – review of data regarding the burden of the patient’s particular illness in the community / country / region / worldD.Pertinent Legislation / Policies – review of any pertinent legislation or policies that would have an impact on the care of patients with their particular condition

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THANK THANK YOUYOU