Ob Gyn Peds Notes Nurses Clinical Pocket Guide | TOP – 2026 |
Not every patient is pregnant. The guide helps you differentiate:
By Clinical Nursing Resources
In the fast-paced worlds of Labor & Delivery, Postpartum, Well-Baby Nursery, and Pediatric units, hesitation is the enemy of efficiency. Unlike a general medical-surgical floor, maternal-child health requires instant recall of two very different patients simultaneously: the mother and the baby. Ob Gyn Peds Notes Nurses Clinical Pocket Guide
For the nurse juggling fetal heart rate strips, pediatric growth charts, newborn bilirubin levels, and postpartum vital signs, trying to pull out a bulky textbook is impractical. Enter the OB/GYN & Peds Notes Nurse’s Clinical Pocket Guide—a spiral-bound, waterproof lifeline that fits in a scrub pocket.
Here is why this guide has become the gold standard for perinatal and pediatric nurses. Not every patient is pregnant
While we advocate for the physical guide, many modern nurses use a hybrid model. There are PDF versions of the Ob Gyn Peds Notes that can be loaded onto an e-reader or tablet kept at the nurse's station. However, the physical guide remains superior for point-of-care use.
The only exception is for night shifts where lighting is low; a physical guide with high-contrast black text on white is generally easier to read under a dimmed patient room light than a backlit screen that may wake a sleeping infant. For the nurse juggling fetal heart rate strips,
You are admitting a 34-week patient with contractions. The guide provides an instant chart of expected fundal height (cm = weeks ± 2 cm). It also offers differentials: If the fundal height is too large, check for multiples, polyhydramnios, or macrosomia. Too small? Think IUGR or oligohydramnios.
The guide includes age-appropriate pain scales:
A "TONE" assessment checklist (Tone, Trauma, Tissue, Thrombin). The guide steps you through fundal massage, medication administration (Methylergonovine, Carboprost, Misoprostol), and when to call for a Bakri balloon or hysterectomy.