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Postpartum & Postnatal Guidelines - Reproductive Care Program of ...

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POSTPARTUM AND POSTNATAL GUIDELINES<br />

health-related organizations. The purpose <strong>of</strong> these National <strong>Guidelines</strong> is “to assist<br />

hospitals and other health care agencies in planning, implementing and evaluating<br />

maternal and newborn programs and services”.<br />

The National <strong>Guidelines</strong> reflect a systems perspective, bringing together community<br />

and institutions in one seamless system, and address consumer and family<br />

participation in health care, i.e. ‘Family-centred care’. The National <strong>Guidelines</strong> are<br />

designed for policy-makers, health care pr<strong>of</strong>essionals (physicians, nurses,<br />

midwives), parents, and program planners. While not clinical practice guidelines, the<br />

National <strong>Guidelines</strong> address a wide range <strong>of</strong> topics and refer to, and abstract from,<br />

clinical practice guidelines throughout the document. (“Family-Centred Maternity<br />

and Newborn <strong>Care</strong>. National <strong>Guidelines</strong>” can be downloaded from the Health Canada<br />

web site: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/english/index.html.)<br />

The SOGC/CPS policy statement on “Early Discharge and Length <strong>of</strong> Stay for Term<br />

Birth” provides clinical direction for postpartum/postnatal programs across the<br />

country (SOGC/CPS policy statement on “Early Discharge and Length <strong>of</strong> Stay for<br />

Term Birth” - Attachment 4). For those mothers and infants discharged from<br />

hospital before 48 hours post-delivery, SOGC/CPS recommends at least one inhome<br />

follow-up visit by a health care pr<strong>of</strong>essional with maternal-child training and<br />

experience, within 48 hours <strong>of</strong> discharge. This recommendation applies to all<br />

mothers and infants who are discharged in this time frame, including those who<br />

would require a home visit on the weekend. In the absence <strong>of</strong> these requirements,<br />

the document recommends that “mothers should be <strong>of</strong>fered the opportunity to stay<br />

in hospital with their baby for a minimum <strong>of</strong> 48 hours after a normal vaginal birth”.<br />

This document is recognized as the ‘pr<strong>of</strong>essional standard’ for early discharge in<br />

Canada. The SOGC/CPS recommendations have been endorsed and adopted by a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> programs and organizations, including the Manitoba College <strong>of</strong> Physicians<br />

and Surgeons and the Child Health Work Group <strong>of</strong> the Ontario Public Health<br />

Association. The SOGC/CPS policy statement was formally endorsed by the<br />

<strong>Reproductive</strong> <strong>Care</strong> <strong>Program</strong> <strong>of</strong> Nova Scotia in 1997. However, a recent study in<br />

Nova Scotia showed that the “SOGC/CPS guidelines for physician follow-up after<br />

early neonatal discharge and for anticipatory guidance (were) not being followed<br />

consistently” and that “the guidelines were disseminated without reinforcement”. 3<br />

3.<br />

L.K. Purcell, T.J.T. Kennedy, K.A. Jangaard, Early neonatal discharge guidelines: Have we dropped the<br />

ball? Paediatric and Child Health. 2001; 6: 769-772.<br />

9

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