SCR270. 4751
Prof. Teano
Mar 23, 2012
Jihwan Lee
NICU Observation
The clinical rotation has been going smoothly and I find myself more comfortable being on the maternity unit than the first day of clinical. Pregnancy and caring for pregnant women are a lot more complicated than I ever thought and I am so glad that I am learning about the miracle and wonder of life. Today, I was also excited about having an observation in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU).
There are two rooms with six incubators, respectively, in NICU. The rooms are equipped with cardiorespiratory monitors, infant ventilators, scales to measure newborn babies’ weights, and some other medical devices. The babies in NICU were relatively smaller than term babies due to prematurity. The nurse who I shadowed emphasized hand hygiene before and after taking care of each baby.
The baby, Williams, who I was assigned to was 20 days old and was born at 32 weeks gestational age. Williams was admitted to NICU for prematurity and respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). The boy was born prematurely, but his Apgar score was 8/8 which is considered a healthy score in general. His mother had abruptio plancentae and came to the hospital bleeding due to premature rupture of membrane (PROM). Williams’ chart says that the amniotic fluid was lightly blood stained, but there was not anything in his chart about what might have caused PROM such as maternal infection, smoking, or GDM. I felt sorry for the mother since it was her first pregnancy and she had such a hard time, but Williams was doing well and also was gaining weight slowly. Luckily, his RDS was resolved the night before my clinical day and his TPN regimen had ended since he got better and could tolerate breastfeeding. His cardiorespiratory monitor went off just a couple of times when he cried, but mostly he was very stable and the nurse just checked up on him once in a while.
Image credit: Shishu Mangal Hospital |
Image credit: Baby Funny |