Read Oxford Handbook of Midwifery Online
Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker
Emotional and psychological considerations
Health considerations
Educational considerations
Information and discussion to obtain consent for the following:
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Antenatal care
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Taking a sexual history
•
Unrecognized/untreated STIs may be vertically transmitted to the baby following rupture of the membranes and vaginal birth. b See Chapter 3 for more specific discussion on individual infections.
The discussion should include:
Symptoms
Investigations
Investigations may include:
Chlamydia
TAKING A SEXUAL HISTORY
53
Gonorrhoea
Blood testing
Other
normal recall time and has she ever had an abnormal result?
1
Health Protection Agency (2010).
Health Protection Report: HIV/Sexually Transmitted Infections
. Available at
www.hpa.org.uk/hpr/infections/hiv_sti.htm (accessed 2.4.10)
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Antenatal care
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Principles of antenatal screening
As science and technology advance, we are able to elicit more information about pregnancy, the mother, and the fetus than ever before. The scru- tiny with which we examine every aspect of pregnancy has never been more detailed. It is very likely that further advances in these techniques will expose women to increasingly difficult choices and dilemmas. The midwife will need to be well prepared and informed to guide her clients through this process.
A range of activities come under the banner of ‘antenatal screening’. Certain activities are a fundamental part of midwifery practice, e.g. measuring the fundal height, listening to the fetal heart, and the routine blood tests, including full blood count, group and Rh factor, and maternal serum for rubella antibodies. We may classify these as low intervention, unlikely to cause any ethical concern. Other types of screening, such as those undertaken to detect fetal abnormality, can lead to much moral difficulty.
The aims of screening
The whole pregnant population is screened because, although collectively
this population has a low risk of abnormality, screening aims to iden- tify those at a higher risk, so that more specific diagnostic tests can be applied.
Benefits of screening and diagnosis
Adverse effects of screening and diagnosis
Implications
PRINCIPLES OF ANTENATAL SCREENING
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Consent and counselling