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Journals Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal M...

Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37105859/spiritual-and-cultural-influences-on-end-of-life-care-and-decision-making-in-nicu
#41
REVIEW
Pak C Ng, Genevieve P G Fung
Understanding and respecting the spiritual beliefs, ethnic roots, cultural norms and customs of individual families is essential for neonatologists to provide clinically appropriate and humane end-of-life care. This review describes the religious/philosophical principles, cultural-related practices/rituals, and traditions in end-of-life care in major spiritual groups of today's multi-cultural, multi-faith societies. The spiritual groups include Christians, Muslims, Jewish Judaism believers and Asian religious/philosophy followers such as Buddhists, Hindus, Taoists, Confucianism devotees and ancestral worshippers...
August 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37100723/palliative-care-for-nicu-survivors-with-chronic-critical-illness
#42
REVIEW
Renee D Boss
The sickest of NICU survivors develop chronic critical illness (CCI). Most infants with CCI will leave the NICU using chronic medical technology and will experience repeated rehospitalizations. The unique issues for these NICU graduates- escalating chronic medical technologies, fractured post-NICU healthcare, gaps in home health services, and family strain-are common and predictable. This means that raising family and NICU team awareness of these issues, and putting plans in place to address them, should occur for every NICU infant with CCI...
August 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37277239/editorial-palliative-and-end-of-life-care-in-the-nicu-issue-i
#43
EDITORIAL
Mark R Mercurio, Renee D Boss
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37230860/seminars-in-fetal-neonatal-medicine-palliative-and-end-of-life-care-in-the-nicu
#44
REVIEW
Dana Peralta, Jori Bogetz, Monica E Lemmon
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37173213/maternal-fetal-surgery-as-part-of-pediatric-palliative-care
#45
REVIEW
Felix R De Bie, Tyler Tate, Ryan M Antiel
Maternal-fetal surgical interventions have become a more common part of prenatal care. This third option, beside termination or post-natal interventions, complicates prenatal decision-making: while interventions may be lifesaving, survivors may face a life with disability. Pediatric palliative care (PPC) is more than end of life or hospice care, it aims at helping patients with complex medical conditions live well. In this paper, we briefly discuss maternal-fetal surgery, challenges regarding counseling and benefit-risk evaluation, argue that PPC should be a routine part of prenatal consultation, discuss the pivotal role of the maternal-fetal surgeon in the PCC-team, and finally discuss some of the ethical considerations of maternal-fetal surgery...
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37150640/decision-making-for-extremely-preterm-infants-with-severe-hemorrhages-on-head-ultrasound-science-values-and-communication-skills
#46
REVIEW
M Chevallier, K J Barrington, P Terrien Church, T M Luu, A Janvier
Severe intracranial hemorrhages are not rare in extremely preterm infants. They occur early, generally when babies require life-sustaining interventions. This may lead to ethical discussions and decision-making about levels of care. Prognosis is variable and depends on the extent, location, and laterality of the lesions, and, importantly also on the subsequent occurrence of other clinical complications or progressive ventricular dilatation. Decision-making should depend on prognosis and parental values. This article will review prognosis and the uncertainty of outcomes for different lesions and provide an outline of ways to conduct an ethically appropriate discussion on the decision of whether to continue life sustaining therapy...
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37149446/ethics-at-the-end-of-life-in-the-newborn-intensive-care-unit-conversations-and-decisions
#47
REVIEW
Mark R Mercurio, Lynn Gillam
The unexpected birth of a critically ill baby raises many ethical questions for neonatologists. Some of these are obviously ethical questions, about whether to attempt resuscitation, and, if the baby is resuscitated and survives, whether to continue life sustaining interventions. Other ethical decisions are more related to what to say rather than what to do. Although less obvious, they are equally as important, and may also have far-reaching ramifications. This essay presents the story of a newborn with profound hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, and reviews decisions regarding resuscitation, withdrawal of mechanical ventilation, withdrawal of medically administered nutrition and hydration, and active euthanasia...
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37147253/paediatric-palliative-care-in-the-nicu-a-new-era-of-integration
#48
REVIEW
Sophie Bertaud, Angela M Montgomery, Finella Craig
We are entering a new era of integration between neonatal medicine and paediatric palliative care, with increasing recognition that the role and skills of palliative care extend beyond care of only the terminally ill infant. This paper addresses the principles of paediatric palliative care and how they apply in the NICU, considers who provides palliative care in this setting and outlines the key components of care. We consider how the international standards of palliative care pertain to neonatal medicine and how a fully integrated approach to care may be realised across these two disciplines...
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37121833/counseling-for-the-option-of-termination-of-pregnancy-for-severe-fetal-anomalies-in-light-of-the-recent-supreme-court-ruling-to-remove-the-constitutional-right-to-an-abortion
#49
REVIEW
Amos Grünebaum, Jonathan D Moreno, Susan Pollet Esq, Frank A Chervenak
A birth defect is a structural or chromosomal change present at birth that can affect almost any part or parts of the body. Birth defects can vary from mild to severe. On June 24, 2022, with its Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization decision the Supreme Court of the United States overturned Roe v. Wade, removing the longstanding landmark 1973 ruling that secured a person's constitutional right to an abortion. With this decision individual states can now decide their own abortion laws. In about one-half of the states that continue the legality of pregnancy termination, the process of offering, discussing, and performing terminations of pregnancy remain the same as previously...
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37105858/neonatal-euthanasia-in-the-context-of-palliative-and-eol-care
#50
REVIEW
A A Eduard Verhagen
Neonatal deaths can be categorized in 5 modes along the dimension of intervention and physiology. This classification can be helpful to analyze the choices that can be made in end-of-life care in the NICU. In the Netherlands, neonatal euthanasia became an optional 6th mode of death since publication and legalization of the Groningen Protocol. This paper summarizes the history, legal status and ethical justification of the Groningen Protocol, and describes end-of-life practice in the subsequent years. Since the implementation of the Groningen Protocol, the practice of neonatal euthanasia has almost disappeared...
June 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37100724/unmasking-grief-reflections-on-the-complicated-relationship-between-moral-distress-and-grief
#51
REVIEW
Lucia D Wocial, Ann Hannan
Perinatal loss often occurs in the context of discovery of a medical condition that presents patients and healthcare providers (HCPs) with difficult choices. Treatment choices are influenced by medical technology, however inescapable prognostic uncertainty, coupled with shared decision-making can lead to ethical dilemmas (Graf et al., 2023) [1]. When patients experience perinatal loss HCPs must grapple with their own emotions. Their sense of grief arises from their empathic connection with patients, bearing witness to their grief...
April 20, 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37062669/extracorporeal-membrane-oxygenation-in-pregnancy-during-the-sars-cov-2-pandemic
#52
REVIEW
Michael Richley, Rashmi Rao
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 5, 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37210285/neonatal-covid-19-the-past-present-and-the-future
#53
EDITORIAL
Satyan Lakshminrusimha, Herman L Hedriana
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37061425/multisystem-inflammatory-disease-in-neonates-mis-n-due-to-maternal-covid-19
#54
REVIEW
Viraraghavan Vadakkencherry Ramaswamy, Thangaraj Abiramalatha, Abdul Kareem Pullattayil S, Daniele Trevisanuto
Multisystem inflammatory disease in neonates (MIS-N) is a disease of immune dysregulation presenting in the newborn period. Thouvgh its etiopathogenesis is proposed to be similar to multisystem inflammatory disease in Children (MIS-C), the exact pathophysiology is largely unknown as of present. The definition of MIS-N is contentious. The evidence for its incidence, the clinical features, profile of raised inflammatory markers, treatment strategies and outcomes stem from case reports, case series and cohort studies with small sample sizes...
April 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37037695/multisystem-inflammatory-syndrome-in-neonates-mis-n-associated-with-perinatal-sars-cov-2-infection-does-it-exist
#55
REVIEW
Satyan Lakshminrusimha, Kiran More, Prakesh S Shah, James L Wynn, Pablo J Sánchez
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37024368/maternal-and-perinatal-covid-19-the-past-present-and-the-future
#56
EDITORIAL
Satyan Lakshminrusimha, Herman L Hedriana
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 1, 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37005209/clinical-features-of-neonatal-covid-19
#57
REVIEW
Alfonso Galderisi, Gianluca Lista, Francesco Cavigioli, Daniele Trevisanuto
The COVID-19 (SARS-Cov-2) pandemic has put a strain on healthcare systems around the world from December 2019 in China, and then rapidly spreading worldwide. The impact of the virus on the entire population and its differential effect on various age groups was unknown at the outset, specifically its severity in elders, children or those living with other comorbidities, thus defining the syndemic, rather than pandemic, character of the infection. The effort of clinicians was initially to organize differential paths to isolate cases or contacts...
April 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36907666/impact-of-perinatal-covid-on-fetal-and-neonatal-brain-and-neurodevelopmental-outcomes
#58
REVIEW
Andrea C Brum, Nestor E Vain
After three years of the COVID-19 pandemic, we have learned many aspects of the disease and the virus: its molecular structure, how it infects human cells, the clinical picture at different ages, potential therapies, and the effectiveness of prophylaxis. Research is currently focused on the short- and long-term consequences of COVID-19. We review the available information on the neurodevelopmental outcome of infants born during the pandemic from infected and non-infected mothers, as well as the neurological impact of neonatal SARS-CoV-2 infection...
April 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37024369/general-approach-to-delivery-and-resuscitation-of-newborn-infants-from-mothers-at-risk-or-proven-covid-19
#59
REVIEW
Marta Aguar-Carrascosa, Belén Fernández-Colomer, Montserrat Izquierdo Renau, Martín Iriondo-Sanz, María Cernada-Badía, Máximo Vento
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 30, 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37105860/maternal-and-neonatal-outcomes-following-sars-cov-2-infection
#60
REVIEW
Lillian B Boettcher, Torri D Metz
Infection with SARS-CoV-2 causing COVID-19 in pregnancy is known to confer risks to both the pregnant patient and fetus. A review of the current literature demonstrates that pregnant individuals with SARS-CoV-2 infection are at risk for higher composite morbidity, intensive care unit admission, ventilatory support, pre-eclampsia, preterm birth, and neonatal intensive care unit admissions compared to pregnant individuals without SARS-CoV-2. Worse obstetric morbidity and mortality generally correlate with the severity of COVID-19...
February 2023: Seminars in Fetal & Neonatal Medicine
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