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Guidance programme

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Showing 31 to 45 of 56 results for intrapartum care

  1. Antenatal care (NG201)

    This guideline covers the routine antenatal care that women and their babies should receive. It aims to ensure that pregnant women are offered regular check-ups, information and support.

  2. Postnatal care (NG194)

    This guideline covers the routine postnatal care that women and their babies should receive in the first 8 weeks after the birth. It includes the organisation and delivery of postnatal care, identifying and managing common and serious health problems in women and their babies, how to help parents form strong relationships with their babies, and baby feeding. The recommendations on emotional attachment and baby feeding also cover the antenatal period.

  3. Accuro for guiding epidural or spinal anaesthesia (MIB245)

    NICE has developed a medtech innovation briefing (MIB) on Accuro for guiding epidural or spinal anaesthesia .

  4. Diabetes in pregnancy: management from preconception to the postnatal period (NG3)

    This guideline covers managing diabetes and its complications in women who are planning pregnancy or are already pregnant. It aims to improve the diagnosis of gestational diabetes and help women with diabetes to self-manage their blood glucose levels before and during pregnancy.

  5. Pregnancy and neonates: neonatal admissions (IND23)

    This indicator covers the proportion of births resulting in a neonatal unit admission. It measures outcomes that reflect the quality of care or processes linked by evidence to improved outcomes. This indicator was previously published as CCG36

  6. Novii Wireless Patch System for maternal and fetal monitoring (MIB228)

    NICE has developed a medtech innovation briefing (MIB) on Novii Wireless Patch System for maternal and fetal monitoring .

  7. Intrapartum care: existing medical conditions and obstetric complications (QS192)

    This quality standard covers care during labour and birth for women who need extra support because they have a medical condition or complications in their current or previous pregnancy. It also covers women who have had no antenatal care. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement. It does not cover the antenatal and postnatal care of pregnant women with mental health conditions, hypertension in pregnancy, diabetes in pregnancy or the organisation of care for pregnant women with complex social factors.

  8. Episcissors-60 for mediolateral episiotomy (HTG538)

    Evidence-based recommendations on Episcissors-60 for mediolateral episiotomy.

  9. AmnioSense for unexplained vaginal wetness in pregnancy (MIB198)

    NICE has developed a medtech innovation briefing (MIB) on AmnioSense for unexplained vaginal wetness in pregnancy .

  10. Does caesarean section protect against cerebral haemorrhage in women with a history of subarachnoid haemorrhage or cerebrovascular malformation?

    risk (for example, because they have presented in labour with no antenatal care), the committee decided that in theory a caesarean...

  11. What clinical features and laboratory investigations can be used to better stratify risk for women in labour with signs of sepsis (including fever and tachycardia)?

    after 42 weeks of pregnancy no antenatal care. The committee did not want to medicalise care for women with fever in labour...

  12. What is the clinical and cost effectiveness of intermittent auscultation compared with continuous cardiotocography for women in labour who have had a previous caesarean section?

    comprehensive information so that they could make informed decisions about their care and wellbeing, and would not be subjected to...

  13. Is obesity an independent risk factor for perinatal morbidity and mortality?

    scans, making accurate fetal monitoring particularly important in the intrapartum period. However, there was no evidence that continuous...

  14. Does the use of ultrasound of the lumbar spine improve siting of regional anaesthetic needles in pregnant women with a BMI over 30 kg/m 2   at the booking appointment?

    this group, particularly in women with a BMI over 40 kg/m2. It's helpful for care planning if an anaesthetist is told when a woman with...

  15. Intrapartum care for women with existing medical conditions or obstetric complications and their babies (NG121)

    This guideline covers care during labour and birth for women who need extra support because they have a medical condition or complications in their current or previous pregnancy. The guideline also covers women who have had no antenatal care. It aims to improve experiences and outcomes for women and their babies.