Labor and Delivery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Labor and Delivery, a labor ward, a labour ward or a Birthing Unit is a department of a hospital devoted to childbirth. In many hospitals, "Labor and Delivery" is one department and Maternity, where a woman recovers following birth, is another. In the United States, it is common practice to move a woman from Labor and Delivery to Maternity in the hour following birth.

Contents

[edit] Benefits and drawbacks

Delivery in the birthing department of a hospital is common practice in Western culture. Benefits include facilities and equipment for an emergency caesarean section and access to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).

Risks include drug complications (the leading adverse effect of hospitalization[1]) and the possibility of a nosocomial infection (infection contracted in a hospital, the second most frequent adverse effect of hospitalization[2][1]), responsible for 88,000 deaths in the United States in 1995.[3][4]

[edit] History

The first maternity ward in the United States is established at Bellevue Hospital Center in 1799.

[edit] Alternatives

Alternatives to hospital delivery include birthing centers and home birth.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b The nature of adverse events in hospitalized patients. Results of the Harvard Medical Practice Study II
  2. ^ Binary Cumulative Sums and Moving Averages in Nosocomial Infection Cluster Detection, Centers for Disease Control
  3. ^ Causes of Death of the United States of America - Death by Medicine Part II
  4. ^ The Impact of the Environment on Infections in Healthcare Facilities, The Center for Health Design
Languages