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2021
Electronic fetal monitoring refers to the use of medical equipment that has the ability to detect, record, analyse and present the records of the fetal heart rate changes with time. It is used in current practice to monitor the fetal heart rate when there is concern that fetal hypoxia may occur. The commonest form is the CardioTocoGraphy.
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Electronic fetal monitoring refers to the use of medical equipment that has the ability to detect, record, analyse and present the records of the fetal heart rate changes with time. It is used in current practice to monitor the fetal heart rate when there is concern that fetal hypoxia may occur. The commonest form is the CardioTocoGraphy.
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Nursing Management (Springhouse), 1996
Currently, recommendations regarding the marginal value of electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) to the standard practice management of the patient in labor must be couched in qualifications regarding both patient tolerance for risk and health team uncertainty about practice guidelines for intermittent auscultation during pregnancy.
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Currently, recommendations regarding the marginal value of electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) to the standard practice management of the patient in labor must be couched in qualifications regarding both patient tolerance for risk and health team uncertainty about practice guidelines for intermittent auscultation during pregnancy.
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Electronic Fetal Monitoring Revisited
Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal Nursing, 2011Nancy K. Lowe Editor I n the December 2010 issue of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Grimes and Pipert provided commentary on what they described as the failure of electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) ‘‘as a public health screening program’’ (p. 1397). The objective of screening is to identify individuals at increased risk for a disease by testing large numbers ...
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Electronic fetal heart rate monitoring
British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2008Electronic fetal heart rate monitoring is a useful monitoring tool to assess intrapartum fetal wellbeing and has been shown to improve perinatal outcomes in at-risk fetuses. This article describes the benefits, criticisms of its use during labour, the pathophysiology and care pathway based on the cardiotocogram features.
Hina, Gandhi, Lucy, Kean
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Fetal Sex Differences in Intrapartum Electronic Fetal Monitoring
American Journal of Perinatology, 2016Objective The article aimed to estimate differences in electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) patterns in term gestations attributable to fetal sex. Study Design We conducted a prospective cohort study of consecutive, singleton, nonanomalous, term gestations that labored during admission.
Anne C, Porter +5 more
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On Electronic Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring
Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal Nursing, 2011Management of fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns is rapidly changing following the 2008 consensus guideline from the National Institutes of Health and Child Development (NICHD) and a 2010 Practice Bulletin from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).
Tekoa L, King, Julian T, Parer
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Electronic Fetal Monitoring and Obstetrical Malpractice
Law, Medicine and Health Care, 1985The standard of care with regard to any new medical technology develops slowly. Attitudes must change, and equipment must be purchased, installed and utilized. Technical problems must be resolved and protocols established. Advances are better understood and more aggressively pursued by some physicians than others, with a consequent disparity in ...
B S, Schifrin, H, Weissman, J, Wiley
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Electronic Fetal Monitoring and Later Outcome
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 1994The principal rationale for the almost universal use of electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) in labor is that its use can effectively prevent the full expression of brain-damaging birth asphyxia by timely intervention in labor. This central hypothesis of EFM has never been adequately tested, in part because of the difficulty of obtaining a large enough ...
N, Paneth, M, Bommarito, J, Stricker
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Electronic fetal monitoring equipment
British Journal of Midwifery, 2001This article reviews a range of electronic fetal monitors, produced by three manufacturers — Hewlett Packard, Huntleigh Diagnostics and Nicolet Vascular Inc. It aims to familiarise midwives with the functions of the monitoring devices available, and considers some possible advantages and disadvantages of the use of different types of electronic fetal ...
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Electronic Fetal Monitoring: Family Medicine Obstetrics
Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 2012Electronic fetal monitoring assesses fetal health during the prenatal and intrapartum process. Intermittent auscultation does not detect key elements of fetal risk, such as beat-to-beat variability. Family medicine obstetric fellowships have contributed new knowledge to this process by articulating a method of analysis that builds on evidence-based ...
John R M, Rodney +2 more
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