Pathophysiology
Clinical meaning
Shoulder Dystocia (Maternity) links antepartum risk screening, intrapartum maternal-fetal surveillance, immediate postpartum stabilization, and newborn transition to safe nursing judgment: recognize hemorrhage, severe hypertension and seizure risk, non-reassuring fetal status patterns, cord emergencies, infection, and neonatal respiratory or metabolic compromise, then escalate per policy and orders. Canadian items may use metric units and provincial wording; prioritization logic matches NCLEX-RN. Pathway context (RN, Canada). This lesson supports NCLEX-RN preparation with Canada-friendly practice framing (SI measures where shown, interprofessional norms). Continue with related lessons from the pathway lesson hub. Learning objectives - Integrate maternal vitals, uterine tone, lochia, pain, fetal tracing, and newborn work of breathing to identify priority threats across the perinatal continuum. - Select nursing interventions and teaching aligned with orders, scope, and unit protocol for labour, OR recovery, and postpartum or newborn liaison themes when shown. - Communicate early when findings suggest severe hypertension, eclampsia, magnesium toxicity, obstetric hemorrhage, uterine rupture, shoulder dystocia, cord prolapse, sepsis, respiratory failure, or critical newborn hypoglycemia.
