10 Guam Code Ann. § 92100
The American Academy of Gynecology (ACOG) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) jointly concede that the optimal length of stay in a hospital for healthy mothers and babies should be forty-eight (48) hours of inpatient care after a vaginal delivery and ninety-six (96) hours after a cesarean section. Those on both sides of the postpartum care debate agree that new mothers need rest and recuperation, support with breast- feeding initiation, education about infant care and parenting, and attention to the possibility of immediate anxiety or future postpartum depression,
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10 Guam Code Ann. HEALTH AND SAFETY
CH. 92 MATERNITY STAY ACT
infection or bleeding. In addition, infants require identification of congenital anomalies, screening for phenyl-ketonuria (PKU), congenital hypothyroidism and other time-sensitive and potentially devastating newborn conditions, arrangement for post-discharge screening or re- screening if infants are discharged within twenty-four (24) hours, attention to feeding and nutrition problems, monitoring of possibly serious neonatal jaundice, and linkage to primary services and immunizations.
Outpatient follow-up can be difficult and expensive. Statistics indicate about fourteen percent (14%) of women and eleven percent (11%) of newborns experience postpartum complications, breast feeding problems, jaundice, dehydration, fever and poor feeding problems within the first twenty-four (24) hours. Early intervention could prevent complications, and reduce infant and maternal mortality and morbidity.