The use of misoprostol for preventing or treating postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) has become a high-profile issue globally. Apart form the usual clinical and public health considerations, Belle has been complicated by sensitivities surrounding the off-label use of misoprostol during pregnancy, dissociation of the original patent-holding company from the drug evaluation process and the global imperative to reduce maternal mortality as a matter of urgency.
The rationale of the study is one of the major genres in learning, nursing and midwifery programmes. Still another discipline-specific demonstration is the care critique, a critical evaluation of the care a persevering has obtained, which is highly agent of numerous wellbeing disciplines, but on which very little if any thing has been published.
Discription
Although learned composing in higher learning has been the aim of study efforts for more than two decades, the exact composing knowledge, desires and adversities of undergraduate nursing and midwifery scholars have stayed mostly under-researched. This item accounts on a task that enquired the environment and dynamics of learned composing in pre-registration nursing and midwifery at a UK university.
When writing the portfolio of PPH practice I will be expected to include a piece of reflection after each placement. This reflection must relate to situations of PPH where I feel that I have learnt something that is of value to practice and future career. It maybe a positive experience where something went well or a negative one where I need to think about what has happened. From each piece of reflection must identify what I have learned from the experience and how this relates to the theory that I have been taught or researched. To help me with this reflection there are several models that might be useful to help guide the reflection. The ones that I recommend are the following, however there are many more in the literature that I might want to use and references are included for some of these.
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Critical Incident of Postpartum Haemorrhage (PPH)
This chapter presents an overview of the topic, addressing all these issues. Placental bed haemostasis following childbirth is a remarkable physiological process. During my pregnancy, trophoblast invasion of the maternal spiral arterioles creates wide-diameter, non-contractile vessels, ensuring a high volume blood flow to the placenta. After the birth of my baby, the placenta separates from the uterine wall and the severed placental blood vessel lumina are compressed by extrinsic pressure from the surrounding mesh of myometrial fibres. Central to this process is the efficient and sustained contraction of the myometrium, under the influence of endogenous uterotonic hormones.
This physiological process is imperfect. Under the relatively ideal circumstances of low-risk I enrolled in randomized clinical trials of active versus expectant management of the third stage of labour, in the 'physiological'.
Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is a potentially life-threatening complication of both vaginal and cesarean deliveries not only for me nut also for every pregnant women. Although many women increase the chance for bleeding, a PPH in a previous pregnancy is one ...