Prenatal Education Considerations
In addition to the individual patient learning needs, style, and influential factors, there is also an enormous amount of educational material. With all of these potential avenues to consider, it is very easy to wonder how to provide basic to even in-depth education to each patient. Â
Creating individual prenatal education game plans and goals is one of the best strategies to attempt conducting sufficient teaching. These educational game plans are most effective when initiated with the very first entry to prenatal care. This early planning strategy can provide individualized educational plans to be developed to increase the opportunity for their personal learning success. Â
The overall entry to care may differ between facilities and communities, creating the need for community wide on-boarding can help to ensure all patients are provided equivalent opportunities for thorough education. Â
Typically, most patients present for a confirmation of pregnancy and at this time or closely to follow this confirmation, is the completion of an OB history intake. During either of these visits or even a short visit in between can be a prime time to establish a baseline education plan. Performing this baseline assessment can establish individual learning aspects to develop the overall education plan and allow for contingency planning as well. Â
Some readers may already be wondering, how do we establish a baseline for prenatal education? How can this fit into prenatal visits? How can it be monitored? What about lack of prenatal care patients? Each of these questions are great questions and I will try to help answer each one throughout. Â
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