This nursing care plan is for a patient who had a cesarean birth. The patient may feel anxiety, fear, guilt or anger about not having the expected vaginal birth. Not addressing these emotions could lead to longer term emotional consequences. Women who request elective c-sections also tend to have higher levels of depression and anxiety during pregnancy than those planning vaginal births. The goal is to provide emotional support to help the patient process their feelings and reduce anxiety related to concerns about how the c-section may affect their health and the baby's health.
This nursing care plan is for a patient who had a cesarean birth. The patient may feel anxiety, fear, guilt or anger about not having the expected vaginal birth. Not addressing these emotions could lead to longer term emotional consequences. Women who request elective c-sections also tend to have higher levels of depression and anxiety during pregnancy than those planning vaginal births. The goal is to provide emotional support to help the patient process their feelings and reduce anxiety related to concerns about how the c-section may affect their health and the baby's health.
This nursing care plan is for a patient who had a cesarean birth. The patient may feel anxiety, fear, guilt or anger about not having the expected vaginal birth. Not addressing these emotions could lead to longer term emotional consequences. Women who request elective c-sections also tend to have higher levels of depression and anxiety during pregnancy than those planning vaginal births. The goal is to provide emotional support to help the patient process their feelings and reduce anxiety related to concerns about how the c-section may affect their health and the baby's health.
This nursing care plan is for a patient who had a cesarean birth. The patient may feel anxiety, fear, guilt or anger about not having the expected vaginal birth. Not addressing these emotions could lead to longer term emotional consequences. Women who request elective c-sections also tend to have higher levels of depression and anxiety during pregnancy than those planning vaginal births. The goal is to provide emotional support to help the patient process their feelings and reduce anxiety related to concerns about how the c-section may affect their health and the baby's health.
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PHINMA University of Pangasinan
College of Health Sciences
NURSING CARE PLAN
Patient’s Initials: C.M.T Chief Complaint: Name of Student Nurse: Carissa Mae T. Estada Age & Gender: Admitting Diagnosis: Level/Block/Group: 3BSN-13 Birthdate: 01/20/2002 Date of Confinement: Clinical Instructor: Address: 0831 Garrero St. Magtaking Bugallon Pang.
ANALYSIS Women who have Short Term Subjective Data: cesarean births need Goals: greater emotional support than women having vaginal births. They are usually happy and excited about the newborn, but they may also feel fear, guilt, grief, or anger because the expected birth course did not occur (Leifer, Objective Data: 2018). They may feel anxious about what is to come and the consequences of a cesarean birth; how it may affect Long Term themselves and the Goals: fetus. If not accepted, expressed, and Vital signs: intervened with, these feelings may cause emotional consequences during NURSING the intrapartum and DIAGNOSIS postpartum periods. Anxiety related to Additionally, women perceived/actual who request an threat of maternal elective cesarean and fetal well- birth have higher being as antepartum evidenced by depression and distress, anxiety levels than apprehension and women who had expressed planned to deliver concerns vaginally (Olieman et regarding al., 2017). consequences.