Tuesday, June 18, 2013

The Dangers of Premature Labor and Delivery


Any time a baby is born with neurological trauma or a visible handicap, the young child might have experienced a birth injury while in labor or childbirth. The knowledge brought to you below is designed to raise knowledge of possible perils in labor and childbirth. It is not an alternative to an expert health practitioner's help and advice, yet that may help you know what to ask your doctor as your baby's arrival comes closer.

Avoiding Premature Delivery

Carrying your child to nine months is obviously the plan, unless intercession is required because of fetal problems or life-threatening conditions impact the mother. Untimely delivery significantly heightens the risk of brain damage and other health conditions for the newborn. In the event you have gone or will go into premature labor, were you provided with the suitable remedies to forestall it? Did a doctor perform exams to identify all immediate problems? If perhaps premature delivery was imminent, what did they do in order to assist the undeveloped lungs and organs recover after birth?

Labor and Induction

During labor, the nursing staff must remain heedful of all indicators of fetal problems. Heart rate, the mother's blood pressure as well as other health factors should be consistently watched. Errors can happen when labor is induced, like overuse of Pitocin and untimely birth. If delivery had to take place early, was there a competent OB/GYN or surgeon readily available to handle any unexpected crises? Was the length and girth of the baby properly determined by means of natal ultrasound? In the event the primary specialist was a midwife, was she entitled to make choices concerning the advisability of a vaginal birth?

Birth Injury

There are several instances of birth complications, oftentimes resulting in brain injury, nerve deterioration, and the baby's or mother's death. These can be caused by anesthesia misuse, an improper epidural, and incorrect use of forceps or vacuum pressure extractors. Many other prevalent causes can include improper delivery process, undiscovered rupture of the uterus, and injury from the umbilical cord.

Further fairly typical causes of birth injury are:

Failure to foresee or identify shoulder dystocia;
Inability to carry out a well-timed C-section;
Potentially hazardous natural birth after previous caesarean;
Oxygen lack leading to stillbirth or post-birth brain damage;
Failure to administer medications for any disorders or microbial infection;
Birth errors ultimately causing cerebral hemorrhage, loss of brain functions or death of the mother;
and failing to speak to a specialist when necessary

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