Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Caesarean section is the delivery of a baby through a cut in the mother’s lower abdomen
and the uterus. It was an operation with many risks, less than a century ago. Today, it is one of the
most frequently performed surgeries in the world. Caesarean births are more common than most
surgeries (such as gallbladder removal, hysterectomy or tonsillectomy) due to many factors. One
factor, of course, is that nearly 50% of the world population are women, and pregnancy is still a
very common condition! However, more important is the fact that a Caesarean section may be life
saving for the baby, or mother or both. Caesarean birth is also much safer today than it was a few
decades ago. Thus “caesarean” is not something that should scare you, as the ultimate goal is a
healthy mother and healthy baby, regardless of the method of delivery.
INDICATIONS:
Emergency Caesarean Section
Fetal Distress
The baby may not be tolerating the forces of labor well.
Dystocia
Difficulty or abnormal labor patterns.
Bleeding from placenta
Placental or cord problem
Planned/ Elective Caesarean Section
Previous Caesarean delivery
Placenta previa
Mal-presentation of the baby
Transverse lie
Shoulder presentation
Oblique lie
Breech presentation (buttocks first)
Posterior face presentation
Brow presentation
Cephalo-pelvic
A small or contracted pelvis
Resulting from pelvic injury or fracture
A large sized baby where the baby is to big to deliver through the pelvis
Other problems of the birth canal
A stenos cervix
A thickly cervix which does not open up
Previous pelvic injury repair of a urinary or rectal pistula
Active herpes lesion of the genital tract
Maternal medical condition
PIH
Maternal Diabetes
Other medical illness like Asthma
Objectives:
Knowledge:
1. Correlate concept learned to actual exposure in the area.
2. Assess the pain manifested by the mother during active
labor.
3. Differentiate frequency, duration and interval.
4. Identify instruments used in the delivery.
5. Organize all things needed before and after delivery.
Skills:
1. Perform aseptically open cloving.
2. Serve properly and aseptically the instrument s to the
physician.
3. Do labor watch properly.
4. Arrange and clean all instruments used.
Attitude:
1. Be polite, punctual and kind.
2. Manifest initiative and resourcefulness.
3. Respond to corrections and criticism positively.
4. Show Augustinian value at all time.