keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38134344/palliative-care-for-infants-in-the-neonatal-intensive-care-unit-a-scoping-review
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eun Sook Kim, Sue Kim, Sanghee Kim, Sujeong Kim, So Yoon Ahn, Hyejung Lee
This scoping review aimed to explore the characteristics of neonatal palliative care in the neonatal intensive care unit, including the features, contents, and experiences of infants, parents, and nurses during palliative care. Five databases (PubMed, Cochrane, CINAHL, Research Information Sharing Service, and Korean Studies Information Service System) were searched to identify relevant articles published between 2011 and 2020. From the systematic search and review process, 13 studies that met the eligibility criteria were selected for the analysis...
December 22, 2023: Journal of Hospice and Palliative Nursing: JHPN
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38127593/implementation-of-a-nurse-driven-eat-sleep-console-esc-treatment-pathway-at-a-community-hospital-for-treatment-of-neonatal-opioid-withdrawal-syndrome-in-an-effort-to-improve-short-term-outcomes
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hamza Halloum, Brooke J Daniels, Dawn Beville, Kathleen Thrasher, Gregory C Martin, Marc A Ellsworth
BACKGROUND: The Chandler Regional Medical Center (CRMC) neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) began a phased implementation of Eat-Sleep-Console (ESC) for the management of those at risk for neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS). PURPOSE: The purpose of this initiative is to track short-term outcomes as well as the program's effect on nursing workflow and job performance rating/satisfaction. METHODS: A retrospective review of the ESC implementation process at CRMC from the years 2018-2020...
December 21, 2023: Advances in Neonatal Care: Official Journal of the National Association of Neonatal Nurses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38107261/fetal-cardiac-magnetic-resonance-imaging-of-the-descending-aorta-in-suspected-left-sided-cardiac-obstructions
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katrin Fricke, Daniel Ryd, Constance G Weismann, Katarina Hanséus, Erik Hedström, Petru Liuba
BACKGROUND: Severe left-sided cardiac obstructions are associated with high morbidity and mortality if not detected in time. The correct prenatal diagnosis of coarctation of the aorta (CoA) is difficult. Fetal cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) may improve the prenatal diagnosis of complex congenital heart defects. Flow measurements in the ascending aorta could aid in predicting postnatal CoA, but its accurate visualization is challenging. OBJECTIVES: To compare the flow in the descending aorta (DAo) and umbilical vein (UV) in fetuses with suspected left-sided cardiac obstructions with and without the need for postnatal intervention and healthy controls by fetal phase-contrast CMR flow...
2023: Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38088772/spiritual-care-in-picus-a-u-s-survey-of-245-training-fellows-2020-2021
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paige E Stevens, Caroline E Rassbach, FeiFei Qin, Kevin W Kuo
OBJECTIVES: To understand the perspectives of pediatric fellows training in critical care subspecialties about providing spiritual care. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey of United States National Residency Matching Program pediatric fellows training in critical care specialties. SETTING: Online survey open from April to May 2021. SUBJECTS: A total of 720 fellows (165 cardiology, 259 critical care, and 296 neonatology) were contacted, with a response rate of 245 of 720 (34%)...
December 13, 2023: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38083855/the-impact-of-physical-and-environment-factors-on-parental-presence-for-oral-feeding-in-new-zealand-neonatal-intensive-care-units
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lise Bakker, Bianca Jackson, Anna Miles
AIM: To identify physical environmental factors influencing family involvement in feeding in New Zealand neonatal units. BACKGROUND: Infant oral feeding development is critical for both short-term feeding skills and longer term neurodevelopmental outcomes. The neonatal environment is well-known as challenging for neuroprotection due to negative sensory exposure. The impact of environmental factors on oral feeding in New Zealand (NZ) neonatal units is currently unexplored, and knowledge of this could allow for evidence-based unit design...
December 11, 2023: HERD
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38072010/increasing-u-s-maternal-health-equity-among-immigrant-populations-through-community-engagement
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maryum Zaidi, Heidi Collins Fantasia, Rebecca Penders, Ainat Koren, Comfort Enah
Immigrant women in the United States are at an elevated risk of poor maternal health outcomes due to cultural, linguistic, or socioeconomic barriers that may lead to critical delays in obtaining adequate health care. Ensuring access to high-quality, culturally appropriate perinatal health care is crucial to improve the health and well-being of immigrant mothers and their children. Various aspects of perinatal health care for immigrant women can be improved through community engagement strategies. Barriers can be addressed by involving community members in designing and delivering culturally appropriate maternal health services...
December 7, 2023: Nursing for Women's Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38063802/using-simulation-based-training-to-improve-neonatal-resuscitation-clinical-competency-confidence-and-comfort-level-of-nicu-caregivers
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
April Felton, Kristy Cheshire
BACKGROUND: Approximately 10% of newborns require resuscitation at delivery or during a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) stay. Neonatal intensive care unit caregivers competent in providing neonatal resuscitation decrease perinatal mortality and improve neonatal outcomes. Infrequency of resuscitation events, lack of repetition, and inexperience leave caregivers feeling un-prepared for emergency situations. There is a need for educational strategies to maintain competency and increase confidence and comfort level...
December 6, 2023: Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38054187/demystifying-non-invasive-approaches-for-screening-jaundice-in-low-resource-settings-a-review
#28
REVIEW
Umme Abiha, Dip Sankar Banerjee, Saptarshi Mandal
All national and international pediatric guidelines universally prescribe meticulous bilirubin screening for neonates as a critical measure to mitigate the incidence of acute bilirubin encephalopathy (ABE) and Kernicterus. The prevailing gold standard for jaundice detection in neonates necessitates invasive blood collection, followed by subsequent biochemical testing. While the invasive procedure provides dependable bilirubin measurements and continues to be the sole gold standard diagnostic method for assessing bilirubin concentration...
2023: Frontiers in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38037628/gaps-in-pediatric-emergency-medicine-education-of-emergency-medicine-residents-a-needs-assessment-of-recent-graduates
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kyle Schoppel, Jordan Spector, Ijeoma Okafor, Richard Church, Katy Deblois, David Della-Giustina, Adam Kellogg, Casey MacVane, Matthew Pirotte, David Snow, Geoffrey Hays, Amy Mariorenzi, Haley Connelly, Alexander Sheng
BACKGROUND: More than 90% of pediatric patients presenting to emergency departments (EDs) in the United States are evaluated and treated in community-based EDs. Recent evidence suggests that mortality outcomes may be worse for critically ill pediatric patients treated at community EDs. The disparate mortality outcomes may be due to inconsistency in pediatric-specific education provided to emergency medicine (EM) trainees during residency training. There are few studies surveying recently graduated EM physicians assessing perceived gaps in the pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) education they received during residency...
December 2023: AEM Education and Training
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38037157/the-use-of-projected-autonomy-in-antenatal-shared-decision-making-for-periviable-neonates-a-qualitative-study
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Megan J Thorvilson, Katherine Carroll, Bethany D Kaemingk, Karen S Schaepe, Christopher A Collura
BACKGROUND: In this study, we assessed the communication strategies used by neonatologists in antenatal consultations which may influence decision-making when determining whether to provide resuscitation or comfort measures only in the care of periviable neonates. METHODS: This study employed a qualitative study design using inductive thematic discourse analysis of 'naturally occurring data' in the form of antenatal conversations around resuscitation decisions at the grey zone of viability...
December 1, 2023: Maternal Health, Neonatology and Perinatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38024889/effect-of-supported-sitting-position-during-second-stage-of-labor-on-its-outcome-in-primigravidae-a-quasi-experimental-study
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jagriti Chauhan, Himanshu Vyas, Pratibha Singh, Mukesh C Sharma, Deviga Thirunavukkarasu
BACKGROUND: The childbirth position has a significant influence on labor, maternal comfort, and neonatal outcome. In sitting position, there is a faster fetal descent with the effect of gravity. The information on this subject is relatively scant. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the effect of a supported sitting position during second stage of labor on its outcome in primigravidae. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A quasi-experimental study with a post-test only control group design was used...
September 2023: Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37997373/disposition-of-levobupivacaine-during-intraoperative-continuous-caudal-epidural-analgesia-in-a-preterm-neonate
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan Sipek, Pavla Pokorna, Martin Sima, Jitka Styblova, Vladimir Mixa
BACKGROUND: Continuous caudal epidural analgesia used intraoperatively in children is an effective and safe technique. However, in preterm neonates, developmental factors may significantly affect levobupivacaine disposition, leading to variable pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and potential large-variable systemic toxicity of local anesthetics. OBJECTIVE: To our knowledge, this is the first case report describing the disposition of levobupivacaine used for intraoperative caudal epidural analgesia in a preterm neonate treated for the postoperative pain profile...
November 22, 2023: Biomedical Papers of the Medical Faculty of the University Palacký, Olomouc, Czechoslovakia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37969155/little-patients-big-tasks-a-pediatric-emergency-medicine-escape-room
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Pelletier, Ernesto Romo, Bryan Feinstein, Charles Smith, Gina Pellerito, Alexander Croft
AUDIENCE: The target audience for this small group session is post-graduate year (PGY) 1-4 emergency medicine (EM) residents, pediatric EM (PEM) fellows, and medical students. INTRODUCTION: Pediatric emergency department visits have been declining since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to decreased exposure to pediatric emergency care for EM residents and other learners in the ED.1 This is a major problem, given that the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) mandates that a minimum of 20% of patient encounters or five months of training time for EM residents must occur with pediatric patients, with at least 50% of that time spent in the ED setting...
October 2023: Journal of education & teaching in emergency medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37967273/prongs-or-mask-for-nasal-continuous-positive-airway-pressure-in-neonates-which-one-is-more-comfortable
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Baran Cengiz Arcagok, Hulya Bilgen, Asli Memisoglu, Hulya Ozdemir, Sibel Sakarya, Eren Ozek
BACKGROUND: Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP) is a common mode of respiratory support in neonatal intensive care units. Our objective was to compare whether NCPAP given with nasal prongs compared with a nasal mask reduces the pain scores in preterm infants with respiratory distress. METHODS: Preterm infants on NCPAP due to respiratory distress were included in the study. All infants received NCPAP via the Infant Flow SiPAP. The COVERS pain scale was used to score the infants' pain...
November 3, 2023: Journal of Perinatal & Neonatal Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37920604/parents-psychological-and-decision-making-outcomes-following-prenatal-diagnosis-with-complex-congenital-heart-defect-an-exploratory-study
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alistair Thorpe, Rebecca K Delaney, Nelangi M Pinto, Elissa M Ozanne, Mandy L Pershing, Lisa M Hansen, Linda M Lambert, Angela Fagerlin
UNLABELLED: Background. Parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex congenital heart defect (CHD) are at high risk of negative psychological outcomes. Purpose. To explore whether parents' psychological and decision-making outcomes differed based on their treatment decision and fetus/neonate survival status. Methods. We prospectively enrolled parents with a fetus diagnosed with a complex, life-threatening CHD from September 2018 to December 2020. We tested whether parents' psychological and decision-making outcomes 3 months posttreatment differed by treatment choice and survival status...
2023: MDM Policy & Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37907873/comparison-of-maternal-outcomes-in-caring-by-doula-trained-lay-companion-and-routine-midwifery-care
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shirin Shahbazi Sighaldeh, Afsaneh Azadpour, Katayoun Vakilian, Abbas Rahimi Foroushani, Seyedeh Fatemeh Vasegh Rahimparvar, Sedigheh Hantoushzadeh
INTRODUCTION: The aim of this study was to compare maternal and neonatal outcomes in the care provided by Doula, trained lay companion, and routine midwifery care in the labor and obstetric units. In this study, only results related to maternal outcomes were presented. METHOD: This is a quasi-experimental study, which was conducted on 150 women with low-risk pregnancies who had been selected for vaginal birth at private clinics and public hospitals of Arak, Iran...
October 31, 2023: BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37831654/professional-guidelines-for-the-care-of-extremely-premature-neonates-clinical-reasoning-versus-ethical-theory
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
H Alexander Chen, Matthew J Drago
AbstractProfessional statements guide neonatal resuscitation thresholds at the border of viability. A 2015 systematic review of international guidelines by Guillen et al. found considerable variability between statements' clinical recommendations for infants at 23-24 weeks gestational age (GA). The authors concluded that differences in the type of data included were one potential source for differing resuscitation thresholds within this "ethical gray zone." How statements present ethical considerations that support their recommendations, and how this may account for variability, has not been as rigorously explored...
2023: Journal of Clinical Ethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37824830/warming-prior-to-heel-stick-blood-sample-quality-and-infant-comfort-a-randomized-controlled-trial
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ulla List Toennesen, Helene Kierkegaard, Poul-Erik Kofoed, Jonna Skov Madsen, Jesper Fenger-Gron, Betty Noergaard, Patricia Diana Soerensen
BACKGROUND: Capillary blood sampling (heel stick) in infants is commonly performed in neonatal care units. Before the procedure, warming the infant's heel is often a customary practice, but no consensus exists on the most effective heel-warming method. PURPOSE: To compare the effects of routinely used warming methods (glove, gel pack, or blanket) applied prior to heel stick on blood sample quality and infant's comfort. METHODS: This prospective, double-blind, randomized controlled trial conducted in the neonatal intensive care unit included infants (postmenstrual age of ≥28 + 0 weeks and ≤43 + 6 weeks) who were computer-randomized to 1 of 3 warming methods...
October 12, 2023: Advances in Neonatal Care: Official Journal of the National Association of Neonatal Nurses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37822320/perinatal-palliative-care-focus-on-comfort
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
F T McCarthy, A Kenis, E Parravicini
Providing comfort while a patient is living with a life-limiting condition or at end of life is the hallmark of palliative care regardless of the patient's age. In perinatal palliative care, the patient is unable to speak for themselves. In this manuscript we will present guidelines garnered from the 15-year experience of the Neonatal Comfort Care Program at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, and how they provide care for families along the perinatal journey. We will describe essential tools and strategies necessary to consider in assessing and providing comfort to infants facing a life-limiting diagnosis in utero , born at the cusp of viability or critically ill where the burden of care may outweigh the benefit...
2023: Frontiers in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37803402/high-flow-nasal-cannula-hfnc-vs-continuous-positive-airway-pressure-cpap-vs-nasal-intermittent-positive-pressure-ventilation-as-primary-respiratory-support-in-infants-of%C3%A2-%C3%A2-%C3%A2-32%C3%A2-weeks-gestational-age-ga-study-protocol-for-a-three-arm-multi-center-randomized
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rong Zhou, Tao Xiong, Jun Tang, Yi Huang, Wenli Liu, Jun Zhu, Chao Chen, Lingyue Gong, Ke Tian, Aoyu Wang, Dezhi Mu
BACKGROUND: Health problems in neonates with gestational age (GA) ≥ 32 weeks remain a major medical concern. Respiratory distress (RD) is one of the common reasons for admission of neonates with GA ≥ 32 weeks. Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) represents a crucial approach to treat RD, and currently, the most used NIV modes in neonatal intensive care unit include high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC), continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), and nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation...
October 6, 2023: Trials
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