Current Controversies in Pregnancy and Epilepsy: A Unique Challenge to Nursing |
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Authors: | NANCY JEANNE CONLEY BA BSN ELLEN OLSHANSKY RNC DNSc |
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Affiliation: | Department of Parent and Child Nursing, University of Washington School of Nursing. |
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Abstract: | Approximately 11,550 women with epilepsy give birth annually, yet maternity nurses receive little information on how to care for these patients. Children of epileptic mothers are born with an increased incidence of birth defects, and have a higher perinatal mortality rate. Complications such as bleeding during pregnancy, and interventions such as cesarean births and labor inductions are more common among epileptic women, and seizures tend to increase during pregnancy in more than one-third of epileptic women. Informed nursing care is essential to ensure the best possible outcome of these pregnancies. |
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