Cord Management of the Term Newborn
Ola Andersson, Judith Mercer
Abstract
Keeping the umbilical cord intact after delivery facilitates transition from fetal to neonatal circulation and allows a placental transfusion of a considerable amount of blood. A delay of at least 3 minutes improves neurodevelopmental outcomes in term infants. Although regarded as common sense and practiced by many midwives, implementation of delayed cord clamping into practice has been unduly slow, partly because of beliefs regarding theoretic risks of jaundice and lack of understanding regarding the long-term benefits. This article provides arguments for delaying cord clamping for a minimum of 3 minutes.
Topics & Concepts
MedicineCord clampingUmbilical cordCordCord bloodTerm (time)JaundiceNeonatologyIntensive care medicineFetusPediatricsObstetricsPregnancySurgeryInternal medicineImmunologyQuantum mechanicsGeneticsPhysicsBiologyNeonatal Health and BiochemistryNeuroscience of respiration and sleepNeonatal Respiratory Health Research