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Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker

Oxford Handbook of Midwifery (47 page)

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  • Advice on weight and lifestyle plus regular monitoring of weight, BMI, and waist circumference should be offered during consultations for family planning or during pre-conception consultations.
    • Women of childbearing age with a BMI of 30kg/m
      2
      or above should receive information and advice about the risks of obesity during pregnancy and supported to lose weight before conception.
      5
      Pregnancy care
  • Women should have their BMI calculated at the booking visit and the result documented in the handheld and electronic record.
  • Discuss her eating habits and how physically active she is. Find out if she has any concerns about diet and the amount of physical activity she does and try to address them.
    5
  • Advise her that a healthy diet and being physically active will benefit both her and her unborn child during pregnancy and will also help her to achieve a healthy weight after giving birth. Advise her to seek information and advice on diet and activity from a reputable source.
    5
  • Advise her on how to use Healthy Start vouchers to increase the fruit and vegetable intake of those eligible for the Healthy Start scheme (women <18 years and those who are receiving benefit payments).
    5
  • Dispel any myths about what and how much to eat during pregnancy. For example, advise that there is no need to ‘eat for two’ or to drink full-fat milk. Explain that energy needs do not change in the first
    6 months of pregnancy and increase only slightly in the last 3 months (and then only by around 200cal/day).
    5
  • Advise her that moderate-intensity physical activity will not harm her or her unborn child. At least 30 minutes per day of moderate intensity activity is recommended.
    5
    Swimming or brisk walking is ideal and this should start slowly and build up for those who are not used to this level of activity.
  • Pregnant women with a BMI of 40kg/m
    2
    or above should be referred
    for a consultation with an obstetric anaesthetist, so that difficulties with venous access, or regional or general anaesthesia can be identified. A management plan for labour should be discussed and documented.
  • An appropriate size arm cuff should be used to measure blood pressure at antenatal visits and the cuff size recorded in the antenatal notes.
  • Women with a BMI of 30kg/m
    2
    or above should be screened for gestational diabetes.
  • Pregnant women with a BMI of 40kg/m
    2
    or above should have a third trimester assessment of their manual handling requirements.
  • A risk assessment for thromboembolism should be carried out and both antenatal and post delivery thromboprophylaxis considered.
    Care during labour
  • Women with a BMI of 35kg/m
    2
    or above should give birth in a consultant led obstetric unit.
  • An Obstetrician and Anaesthetist of appropriate seniority should be informed and available for care of a woman in labour with a BMI of 40kg/m
    2
    or above.
    CHAPTER 9
    Pregnancy complications
    178
    • Women with a BMI of 40kg/m
      2
      or above should have venous access established in early labour. These women should receive continuous midwifery care.
    • Operating department staff should be informed early of any woman weighing greater than 120kgs who require operative delivery.
    • Women with a BMI of 30kg/m
      2
      or above should have an actively managed third stage of labour.
      Postnatal care
    • Obesity is associated with low breastfeeding initiation and maintenance rates, so specialist advice and support should be offered both antenatally and postnatally.
    • Early mobilization should be encouraged.
    • Women with a BMI of 30kg/m
      2
      or above should continue to receive nutritional and physical activity advice with a view to weight reduction. The 6–8 week post natal assessment can be a useful time to offer further support. This can continue to be followed up at 6-monthly intervals by the GP or other appropriate health professional.
      5
    • Women with a BMI of 30kg/m
      2
      should have regular follow up by their GP for the development of type 2 diabetes.
    • Women who develop gestational diabetes should receive annual screening for cardio-metabolic risk factors and receive advice on nutrition and weight management.
      Practical considerations
      Maternity units should have guidelines in place to facilitate care of women with BMI of 30kg/m
      2
      or above with respect to referral criteria, facilities and equipment.
      The following are required:
    • Large blood pressure cuffs

      Sit-on weighing scale
    • Large chairs and wheelchairs
    • Ultrasound scan couches, ward and delivery beds
    • Theatre trolleys and operating theatre tables
    • Lifting and lateral transfer equipment.
      1. Centre for Maternal and Child Enquiries and Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecologists (2010).
        Management of Women with Obesity During Pregnancy.
        London: RCOG Press.
      2. NHS Information Centre (2008).
        Health Survey for England 2006: CVD and Risk Factors: Adults, Obesity and Risk Factors Children.
        London: NHS Information Centre. Available from: M www.
        ic.nhs.uk (accessed 22.2.11)
        .
      3. Lewis, G (ed.) (2007).
        The Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH). Saving Mothers’ Lives: Reviewing Maternal Deaths to Make Motherhood Safer

        2003–2005
        . The 7th report on Confidential Enquires into Maternal Deaths in the United Kingdom. London: CEMACH.
      4. Catalano PM (2007). Management of obesity in pregnancy.
        Obstetrics and Gynecology
        109
        , 419–33.
      5. National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (2010). Dietary interventions and physical activity interventions for weight management before during and after pregnancy. Guideline PH27. London: NICE. Available at : M
        http://guidance.nice.org.uk/PH27 (accessed 22.2.11).
      Medical conditions during pregnancy
      ‌‌
      Chapter 10
      179
      Asthma
      180
      Cardiac conditions
      182
      Diabetes
      184
      Epilepsy
      187
      Thromboembolic disorders
      188
      Principles of thromboprophylaxis
      190
      Thyroid disorders
      192
      Renal conditions
      194
      CHAPTER 10
      Medical conditions during pregnancy
      180‌‌
      Asthma
      Asthma is the most common chronic disease in children and young adults and is on the increase; 4–8% of pregnant women have asthma. The condi- tion is often underrecognized and suboptimally treated.
      1
      Effect of pregnancy on asthma
    • Asthma tends to improve in pregnancy especially during the last
      12 weeks but it can be very variable, with some remaining stable and others worsening.
    • Breathlessness due to the increasing size of the uterus is sometimes mistaken for worsening asthma.
    • Many women experience a worsening of their symptoms because they stop taking their asthma medication because of concerns about the effects on the fetus.
    • Women who deteriorate during pregnancy tend to have the most severe asthma.
      Effects of asthma on pregnancy
    • Good control is essential for maternal and fetal well-being. Poor control is associated with pregnancy induced hypertension, pre- eclampsia, increased caesarean section, pre-term delivery, intrauterine growth restriction, and low birthweight.
    • Asthma treatment during pregnancy is no different to that at other times and the inhaled medications are safe.
    • Very little inhaled medication reaches the fetus.
    • More harm is likely from withholding treatment than from continuing it.
      Management of asthma during pregnancy
    • Objective monitoring of lung function.
    • Avoiding or controlling asthma triggers.
    • Patient education and individualized pharmacological therapy.

      Those with persistent asthma should be monitored by peak expiratory flow rate, spirometry to measure the forced expiratory volume in 1s, or both.
    • The ultimate goal of asthma therapy is maintaining adequate oxygenation of the fetus by prevention of hypoxic episodes in the mother.
    • Asthma exacerbations should be aggressively managed, with a goal of alleviating asthma symptoms and attaining peak expiratory flow rate or forced expiratory volume in 1s of 70% predicted or more.
    • Pregnancies complicated by moderate or severe asthma may benefit from ultrasound for fetal growth and accurate dating and antenatal assessment of fetal well-being.
    • Asthma medications should be continued during labour, and the mother should be encouraged to breastfeed.
      1
      Dombroski MP (2006). Asthma and pregnancy.
      Obstetrics and Gynecology
      108
      , 667–81.
      This page intentionally left blank
      CHAPTER 10
      Medical conditions during pregnancy
      182‌‌
      Cardiac conditions
      Women with congenital heart disease are surviving to become pregnant in greater numbers due to advances in surgery and better management of care. Antenatal care is a complex issue and early referral to a specialist centre is advisable so that the specialist midwife, cardiologist, obstetri- cian, anaesthetist, fetal medicine specialist, haematologist, neonatologist and cardiac nurse can meet the woman to plan her care and review her progress regularly. This appointment should take place as early as possible as she is a high risk case and requires multidisciplinary care.
      Significance of cardiac conditions
    • Congenital heart disease occurs in 0.8% of newborns.
    • Advances in medical treatment and surgery have resulted in 85% survival rates.
    • Cardiac disease is the leading cause of maternal death in the UK with 48 deaths in the last triennium.
      1
    • Cardiac conditions have many implications for pregnancy due to the normal associated cardiovascular changes:
      • Peripheral vasodilation which is the body’s initial response to pregnancy.
      • Decreased peripheral resistance.
      • Increase in plasma volume by 50%.
      • Increase in RBCs of 20%—physiological haemodilution giving the impression of anaemia but is normal to pregnancy.
      • Cardiac output increases by 50%.
        Assessment
        This can be difficult as normal pregnancy symptoms mirror the symptoms of cardiac disease. The following are all associated with normal pregnancy, however the woman should be encouraged to report any new symptoms no matter how subtle:

        Shortness of breath—dyspnoea, at rest or on exertion
BOOK: Oxford Handbook of Midwifery
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