From the Journals

ACOG advises earlier, more comprehensive postpartum care


 

FROM OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY

Components of comprehensive postpartum care

ACOG recommends the prenatal preparation for the postpartum period include discussions about infant feeding, “baby blues,” postpartum emotional health, parenting challenges, postpartum recovery from birth, long-term management of chronic health conditions, choosing a primary care provider for the mother’s ongoing care, her reproductive desires and choices, and any concerns about interpersonal or partner violence.

Before giving birth, a woman should develop a postpartum care plan with her physician and assemble a care team that includes her primary care providers along with family and friends who can provide support. The plan should include contact information for questions and written instructions about postpartum visits and follow-up care.

Prenatal planning also provides an opportunity to discuss a woman’s breastfeeding plans, goals, and questions as well as common physical problems that women may experience in the weeks after giving birth, such as heavy bleeding, pain, physical exhaustion, and urinary incontinence.

Physicians should inform women of the risks and benefits of becoming pregnant within 18 months and advise them not to have pregnancy intervals of less than 6 months. They should also ensure women know all their contraceptive options and should provide any information necessary for women to determine which methods best meet her needs.

The committee recommended a postpartum visit within the first 3 weeks after birth, instead of the current “6-week check,” that is timed and tailored to each woman’s particular needs. This visit allows assessment of postpartum depression risk and/or treatment and discussion of breastfeeding goals and/or difficulties. Approximately one in five women who stopped breastfeeding earlier than they wanted to had ceased within first 6 weeks post partum.

Woman-centered follow-up should be tailored to women’s individual needs and include a comprehensive postpartum visit no later than 12 weeks after giving birth. The comprehensive visit should include a complete assessment of the woman’s physical, social, and psychological well-being, including discussion of “mood and emotional well-being, infant care and feeding, sexuality, contraception, birth spacing, sleep and fatigue, physical recovery from birth, chronic disease management, and health maintenance,” the committee wrote.

The comprehensive visit should include the following components:

  • Postpartum depression and anxiety screening.
  • Screening for tobacco use and substance use.
  • Follow-up on preexisting mental and physical health conditions.
  • Assessment of mother’s confidence and comfort with newborn care, including feeding method, childcare strategy, identification of the child’s medical home, and recommended immunizations for all caregivers.
  • Comfort and confidence with breastfeeding and management of any challenges, such as breastfeeding-associated pain; logistics and legal rights after returning to work or school; and fertility and contraception with breastfeeding.
  • Assessment of material needs, including housing, utilities, food, and diapers.
  • Guidance on sexuality, dyspareunia, reproductive life plans, contraception, and management of recurrent pregnancy complications, such as daily low-dose aspirin to reduce preeclampsia risk and 17a-hydroxyprogesterone caproate to reduce recurrent preterm birth.
  • Sleep, fatigue, and coping options.
  • Physical recovery from birth, including assessment of urinary and fecal continence and guidance on physical activity and a healthy weight.
  • Chronic disease management and long-term implications of those conditions.
  • Health maintenance, including review of vaccination history, needed vaccinations, and well-woman screenings, including Pap test and pelvic examination as indicated.

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