Childbirth postpartum infections
- If woman unwell and/or febrile in first 6 weeks after childbirth — examine carefully
- Sepsis can be subtle in onset and women may deteriorate rapidly
Common sites of infection
Can be more than 1 type of infection
- Uterus — endometritis is the most common cause of postnatal infection
- Urinary tract
- Breast — mastitis
- Wound — perineal or abdominal
- Chest
Ask
- Breastfeeding issues
- Symptoms of chest infection
- Bowel or urine problems
- Vaginal bleeding
- Other symptoms not related to pregnancy (eg sore throat, influenza)
Check
- Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- U/A
- Head-to-toe exam — with attention to
- Breasts — tenderness, red areas, lumps in breast or axilla
- Lungs — observe and listen to breathing
- Abdominal assessment — check wound if caesarean
- Perineum — sores, episiotomy, tears, offensive discharge, heavy bleeding
- Signs of deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism
Do
- If signs of infection — see appropriate protocol
- Uterus infection (endometritis) — most common cause of postnatal infection
- Abdominal and perineal wound infections
- Urinary tract
- Breast — mastitis
- Wound — perineal or abdominal
- Chest
- Medical consult — for antibiotic choice based on regional sensitivities
- Consider blood cultures
Uterus infection (endometritis)
Problems
- May be heavy vaginal bleeding
- Sepsis — bacteria infecting the uterus enters bloodstream
- If woman is or starts bleeding heavily — see Secondary postpartum haemorrhage straight away
Causes
- Retained products (part of placenta or membranes left inside uterus)
- Infection in vagina (eg STI, GBS)
- Infection introduced during or after birth (eg caesarean section, forceps, manual removal, perineal tear)
Look — in file notes
- Date and type of birth
- Did placenta and membranes appeared complete, perineal trauma (eg tears), other complications
- Did woman have high temp after birth
- Last vaginal swab results
- If STI in pregnancy — were woman and partner/s treated
- Perinatal infection in baby
Ask
- Pain — where, what type, when did it start
- Vaginal loss — how much, has it increased, colour, any clots, has bleeding stopped since birth
- Vaginal discharge — brown, offensive smell
- If has had sex since birth, was there any pain
- Any other symptoms — may complain of
- Feeling unwell, no energy
- Fever, chills
- Nausea, vomiting, poor appetite
- Difficulty breathing, chest pain, abdominal pain, pain in legs
Check
- Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Weight, BGL
- Head-to-toe exam — with attention to
- Uterus — feel for height of fundus, tenderness, bulkiness, firm or soft, if central or to one side
- Vaginal loss — how much, colour, smell, any clots — put pad between woman’s legs. Change pad each time you check. If bleeding — save and weigh all pads — 1g increase = 1mL loss
- Speculum exam, if skilled — cervix open or closed
- Bimanual exam, if skilled — tenderness, masses, size of uterus, is cervix painful when moved
- Full STI check
Do
- Medical consult about sending to hospital
- Need to send to hospital if
- Very unwell and/or signs of sepsis
- Severe abdominal pain
- Bleeding heavily and/or in shock
- Possible retained products
- Vomiting up medicines
- Nobody to help look after her and her baby
- Diagnosis uncertain
If sending to hospital
- Put in IV cannula — largest possible, insert 2 if time
- Take blood cultures before starting antibiotics — send in with woman
- Start normal saline 1L at 125mL/hr
- Medical consult about antibiotics. Give straight away
- Ceftriaxone IM/IV — adult 1g, single dose
AND azithromycin oral — adult 1g, single dose
AND metronidazole IV — adult 500mg, single dose
- If delay in sending to hospital of more than 24 hours and directed to by doctor — give gentamicin IV once a day — doses
- If allergy to penicillin — medical consult
- While waiting for evacuation
- Give pain relief if needed
- Do not let woman eat or drink anything — may need operation
- Encourage to continue to breastfeed baby, if possible
- Continue observations until evacuation
If woman staying in community
- Medical consult about antibiotics
- Give azithromycin oral — adult 1g, single dose AND ceftriaxone IM — adult 500mg, single dose mixed with lidocaine (lignocaine) 1%
- Next day give amoxicillin-clavulanic acid oral — adult 875+125mg, twice a day (bd) for 10 days
- Day 8 give azithromycin oral — adult 1g single dose
- If allergy to penicillin — medical consult
- Give pain relief if needed
- Assess daily for 5 days (or until antibiotics finished) — make sure there is support and help at home
- Tell woman to come back to clinic straight away if fever, vomiting, pain, heavy bleeding
- If woman not improving after 1–2 days of treatment — medical consult. May need to go to hospital
- Check swab and urine results
- If positive STI — see Pelvic inflammatory disease for follow-up
- Remember to treat partner/s
Abdominal and perineal wound infections
Do
- Wound swab, MC&S
- Medical consult about
- Removing any stitches
- Antibiotics — give amoxicillin-clavulanic acid oral — adult 875+125mg, twice a day (bd) for 5 days
- If allergy — medical consult
- Give pain relief if needed
- Assess daily, clean and dress wound until healed
- If perineal wound — keep area as clean and dry as possible
- Encourage perineal hygiene — shower or wash perineal area twice a day. Change pads often
Follow-up
- If wound not improving after 1–2 days of treatment — medical consult