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Late Preterm Infants, 1st ed. 2019 A Guide for Nurses, Midwives, Clinicians and Allied Health Professionals

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateur : Premji Shahirose Sadrudin

Couverture de l’ouvrage Late Preterm Infants

This volume analyses the distinct care needs of late preterm infants and their parents by reflecting on the best available evidence to inform practice and latest innovations in care. It addresses the spectrum of issues experienced by late preterm infants and their parents and ways to ensure healthy transitions from hospital to community. We define late preterm infants as those born between 340/7 to 366/7 7 weeks? gestational age. 

 

The book uses creative writing prompts and a narrative style to gain insight and be self-reflection in and on practice to move the reader to embrace best practices.  Issues such as mother?s physical and emotional health, father?s burden in postpartum period, the work organization of nurses caring for late preterm infants, feeding and jaundice which threaten readmission, and neurodevelopmental outcomes of late preterm infants are specifically addressed.

 

Areas of innovation are shared for consideration to prompt readers to think about continuous improvement in quality of care. The book shares  local and global perspectives to address the common concerns related to care of late preterm infants and their parents, and fosters a partnership in promoting health of late preterm infants and their parents all across the globe. It  is intended for any health care providers such as nurses, midwives, physicians and other allied care professionals like health visitors, community health workers.


Foreword

Chapter 1. Who is the late preterm infant and what trouble can he potentially gets into after birth?
Shahirose Premji

Chapter 2. Mother’s physical health before delivery matters: what happens and why?! Why is hypoglycaemia a potential concern for late preterm infants?
Jennifer Marandola, Gisela Becker

Chapter 3. Mother’s emotional health during pregnancy matters: what happens and why?!
Katherine Bright,Gisela Becker

Chapter 4. What do I need to know about the father of a late preterm infant to support him in the postpartum period?
Shahirose Premji 

Chapter 5. The social organization of nurses’ work with late preterm infants in non-tertiary settings: say that again?
Catherine Ringham, Shahirose Premji

Chapter 6. Why is it so hard to breastfeed a late preterm infant and what can I do to help parents?
Genevieve Currie

Chapter 7. Why is it so hard to breastfeed a late preterm infant and how to help parents?
Jennifer Marandola, Karen Lasby

Chapter 8. Am I a frequent flyer? Taking care of late preterm infants and their parents in the community
Mary Landsiedel

Chapter 9. Late preterm infants and neurodevelopmental outcomes: Why do I need to serve and return? Are there innovative therapies we can explore?
Aliyah Dosani, Abhay Lodha

Chapter 10. Perspectives from health care providers local to global: Words of wisdom. Personal reflections of caring for late preterm infants
Carole Kenner, Shahirose Premji

Chapter 11. The alternative facts about late preterm infants: You mean there are fake stories about me?
All authors, Shahirose Premji 

Conclusion

Dr. Shahirose Sadrudin Premji, RN, BSc, BScN, MScN, PhD, FAAN, is affiliated with the University of Calgary as an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Nursing, an Adjunct Associate Professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences, and a nurse scientist.

She has over 25 years’ experience in newborn health and has practiced clinically or provided technical expertise internationally (Australia, Canada, China, Kenya, Tanzania, Pakistan and Syria). Dr. Premji’s academic involvement began in 1994 at McMaster University as Clinical Lecture while working as a Neonatal Nurse Practitioner. She has worked as an Associate Professor and Director, Master of Science in Nursing (MScN) Programme at the Aga Khan University – School of Nursing and Midwifery in Karachi, Pakistan which was as a consultant position with the Aga Khan Foundation Canada – Canadian Development Exchange Program. More recently she was involved in developing research and teaching capacity in the Schools of Nursing & Midwifery in Kenya and Uganda.

Shahirose is the founder and 1st President of the Canadian Association of Neonatal Nurses. She is a former Neonatal Nurse Practitioner and Public Health Nurse (postpartum). Her program of research investigates psychosocial, cultural, and environmental factors as both risk factors and targets of intervention to prevent preterm birth and biological mechanisms whereby psychosocial health contributes to preterm birth with a global health perspective. Methodologies she used in previous research include quantitative, qualitative, mixed methodology, and systematic reviews. She has published several book chapters and many peer-reviewed publications, which comprise Cochrane Systematic Reviews (original and updates), research articles, narrative reviews, and meta-analyses.

Shahirose received the College and Association of Registered Nurses of Alberta’s Centennial Award in 2015, and the Jeanne Mance Award (Canadian Association of Nurses’ highe

Details the current best practices and future innovation to care for late preterm infants and their families

Presents a multidisciplinary approach for a better collaboration in late preterm infants care management

Presented in a playful manner

Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 152 p.

15.5x23.5 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).

Prix indicatif 36,91 €

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