Postpartum Assessment & Complications
Breastfeeding & Infant Feeding
Newborn Care & Assessment
Post Delivery Adaptations
Labour Complications & High-Risk Situations
100

This postpartum complication is the most common cause of heavy bleeding after birth due to a poorly contracted uterus.

What is uterine atony?

100

This hormone increases in breastfeeding mothers and helps with milk production.

What is prolactin?

100

Bluish hands and feet in the first few days of life; normal and temporary.

What is acrocyanosis?

100

Postpartum mood shift characterized by tearfulness, emotional swings, and resolving within 2 weeks.

What are postpartum blues?

100

When the umbilical cord slips below the presenting part — the priority nursing action is this patient position.

What is knee-chest or hands-and-knees position?

200

This is the timeframe when reproductive organs return to their pre-pregnant state.

What is the puerperium (fourth trimester)?

200

Breastfeeding mothers should be taught to look for this cue — an early hunger signal — before crying begins.

What is rooting or sucking motions?

200

The first stool a baby passes — thick, black, tarry.

What is meconium?

200

This red flag related to mood disorders requires immediate safety assessment.

What are thoughts of harming themselves or the baby?

200

Medication given before preterm birth to promote fetal lung maturity.

What are corticosteroids (e.g., betamethasone)?

300

A full bladder can cause the uterus to shift upward and to the side — putting the patient at risk for this complication.

What is postpartum hemorrhage?

300

A tender, red, warm area on one breast accompanied by flu-like symptoms suggests this condition.

What is mastitis?

300

A protective, cheesy, white coating on the newborn’s skin.

What is vernix caseosa?

300

Touching, naming, and describing similarities between parents and baby demonstrates this bonding behaviour.

What is claiming?

300

Turning the fetus manually from breech to cephalic late in pregnancy.

What is an external cephalic version?

400

Cramping pain caused by repeated contractions of the uterus after delivery, especially common in multiple gestations or large babies.

What are afterpains?

400

The most reliable sign that a newborn is effectively feeding and well hydrated.

Newborn output - wet/dirty diapers and weight gain 
400

Soft swelling that crosses suture lines from pressure during birth; resolves in a few days.

What is caput succedaneum?

400

The Apgar score is assessed at these two times after birth.

What are 1 minute and 5 minutes?

400

Infants of diabetic mothers are at high risk for this metabolic complication shortly after birth.

What is hypoglycemia?

500

A temperature of 38°C (100.4°F) or higher on two consecutive days postpartum may indicate this.

What is a puerperal/postpartum infection?

500

What is an infectious disease that is contraindicated with breastfeeding in developed nations 

What is HIV 

500

The safest way to prevent heat loss immediately after birth.

What is skin-to-skin / kangaroo care?

500

The most critical adaptation the newborn must make immediately after delivery.

What is establishing effective respirations?

500

The first two things you should do when you suspect a PPH.

What is call for help and fundal massage?