Journal article

Enhanced monitoring during neonatal resuscitation

GM Schmölzer, CJ Morley, OCOF Kamlin

Seminars in Perinatology | W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC | Published : 2019

Abstract

Immediately after birth through spontaneous breaths, infants' clear lung liquid replacing it with air, and gradually establishing a functional residual capacity to achieve gas exchange. Most infants start breathing independently after birth and ~3% of infants who require positive pressure ventilation. When newborns fail to start breathing the current neonatal resuscitation guidelines recommend initiatingpositive pressure ventilationusing a face mask and a ventilation device. Adequate ventilation is the cornerstone of successful neonatal resuscitation; therefore, it is mandatory that anybody involved in neonatal resuscitation is trained in mask ventilation techniques. One of the main problems..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the public for donating money to our funding agencies: GMS is a recipient of the Heart and Stroke Foundation/University of Alberta Professorship of Neonatal Resuscitation, a National New Investigator of the Heart and Stroke Foundation Canada and an Alberta New Investigator of the Heart and Stroke Foundation Alberta. This research was supported by a Women and Children's Health Research Institute grant through the generous support of the Stollery Children's Hospital Foundation.