the mother with an injection, the drug is called RhoGAM.
Yes.any kind of injection can result in an infection if the injection site is not properly cleaned.
when administering a subcutaneous injection why would you avoid an injection site thats hardened or fatty
maxillay central injection
On the injection site? Sorry im confused.
No, this would be a relatively uncommon site for an intramuscular injection in most animal species.
we do not massage site after IM injection because it may cause underlying tissue damage
It is not bad to have a child with a man with A positive blood if you are type A negative. You will have a Rhogam injection during the pregnancy, which controls any risk in subsequent pregnancies.
Rhogam it's an injection given to women immediately after childbirth. The reason is because the mother's blood is RH negative (blood type: 0-, A-, B-, or AB-). Most parents are both RH POSITIVE. Even parents that are both RH negative, no injection is needed. When mom is negative and dad is positive, baby is usually positive, too. The problem occurs when a mom gives birth and both mom and baby's blood mixes. At that time, the mom's natural defense mechanism kicks in. It creates antibodies to fight off the rh + baby. The real threat occurs with subsequent pregnancies, where antibodies will attack the fetus because of it's rh+. Rhogam is given to prevent the formation of antibodies that could threaten the lives of future children.
thigh or arm
1963
RHOgam is the trade name of one drug used in the 1980s. It is an antibody blocker that keeps the mother's blood from destroying the baby's red blood cells.