LDRP
LDRP
LDRP
Definitions
• Antepartum: This is the period of time before birth. A hospital Antepartum
Room is where a doctor places a pregnant woman for observation and
monitoring before the onset of labour, generally due to pregnancy
complications or hospital-ordered bed rest. A woman may spend a few days or
a few months in the Antepartum Room. This room is typically similar in size
and configuration to a general acute care patient room.
• Postpartum: This is the period of time following birth. Postpartum care
encompasses management of the mother and newborn infant during the
postpartum period. This period usually is considered to be the first few days
after delivery, but technically it includes the six-week period after childbirth up
to the mother's postpartum checkup with her health care provider. The
Postpartum Room is where the mother stays after labor and delivery. If using
an LDRP model of care, the LDRP room is the room the mother will use for
the entire stay. The mother will give birth here and the baby will stay with her
(“room in”) until she is ready to go home. The nursery, in this case, is only for
babies or mothers who are very ill, rather than well new-born care.
Definitions
• Nursery (Level I) Holding Nursery: When the infant stays with its mother in the room, referred to as
“rooming-in”, a small “holding nursery” is located adjacent to the nurse station on the unit(s) to
accommodate well infants who need to be removed from the mother’s room. The Holding Nursery will be
located on the Obstetric unit when the LDR concept is used and on the Labor and Delivery Unit when
the LDRP concept is programmed. It should be sized to accommodate the number of infants who do not
remain with their mother during the postpartum stay.
• New-born Nursery or Well Baby Nursery: A new-born nursery is provided for every facility that includes
delivery services. Each new-born nursery has no more than 16 infant stations. If a room-in concept is
being used, the number of infant stations can be reduced. This smaller nursery is known as the Holding
Nursery.
• Obstetric Unit: Also known as Mother-Baby Unit, the Obstetric Unit cares for both antepartum and
postpartum patients and may also be used for female surgery, and other obstetric (OB) or gynecology
(GYN) related patients.
LDP ( Labour-Deliver-Recover)
• In the LDR unit, the patient
is admitted to a room in
which she is expected to
labor, deliver her baby, and
recover from her delivery
prior to being transferred to
a postpartum room, usually
outside the labour floor.
LDRP ( Labour-Deliver-Recover-Postpartum)
• In a LDRP unit, the patient’s room
is reconfigured after the delivery
into a postpartum room, from which
she will ultimately be discharged
home. The LDR versus LDRP
decision has implications for the
anaesthesia service. The LDRP unit
will occupy a much greater
geographic area than will the LDR
unit.
Points for Consideration
• LDRP rooms are recommended where the average workload is 100
deliveries per month or less. For greater than 100 deliveries per month, the
LDR model is recommended.
Factors for Reference
A rule-of-thumb is that LDRs are provided at a ratio of one per 350 non-cesarean births
Calculation for number of LDR Rooms
Step 1 : Determine the projected number of LDR events (project the annual number of births minus
the annual projected number of caesarean births )
Step 2: Add the unscheduled C-sections . Reason (to provide LDR space for the woman who goes to
an LDR room to attempt vaginal delivery and after some period of labour time, is taken to an
operating room for an emergency caesarean section. )
Step 3 :Determine ALOS for normal vaginal birth in LDR room , Normally it is 0.5 days