Women’s Health & Obstetric Emergencies
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Our Services
Immediate Care for Pregnancy and Women’s Health Emergencies
Urgent women’s health and pregnancy-related conditions can occur before pregnancy, during pregnancy, throughout labor, or after delivery. Symptoms such as vaginal bleeding, severe abdominal pain, seizures, fainting, difficulty breathing, or rapidly worsening weakness require prompt medical attention.
New Padre Garcia Hospital provides emergency assessment and initial care for pregnant and postpartum patients, as well as women experiencing urgent gynecologic symptoms.
Our emergency team evaluates the patient’s symptoms, vital signs, pregnancy history, bleeding, pain, level of consciousness, and overall condition. Based on the medical assessment, care may include immediate stabilization, diagnostic support, close monitoring, hospital admission, or referral and transfer when specialized obstetric or surgical care is required.
The Emergency Department is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Service Overview
Women’s Health and Obstetric Emergency Care
This service provides initial emergency assessment and stabilization for urgent pregnancy-related, postpartum, and gynecologic conditions.
Depending on the patient’s condition, emergency care may include:
- Rapid patient assessment and triage
- Pregnancy and obstetric-history review
- Blood pressure and vital-sign monitoring
- Oxygen-saturation monitoring
- Pain and bleeding assessment
- Level-of-consciousness assessment
- Abdominal and pelvic examination when medically appropriate
- Assessment of contractions or possible labor
- Evaluation of vaginal bleeding or fluid leakage
- Fetal assessment when appropriate and available
- Blood-glucose testing when ordered
- Laboratory examinations when medically necessary
- Ultrasound or other diagnostic imaging when ordered and available
- Intravenous fluids or medication based on the doctor’s assessment
- Bleeding control and initial stabilization
- Continuous patient monitoring and reassessment
- Hospital admission when required
- Referral or transfer for specialized obstetric, surgical, or critical care
The examinations and treatments provided depend on the patient’s symptoms, pregnancy stage, medical history, physician assessment, and the hospital’s available capabilities.
Advantages
Available 24 Hours a Day
Our Emergency Department is available day and night for urgent pregnancy-related, postpartum, and women’s health concerns.
Urgency-Based Prioritization
Patients are attended to according to the seriousness of their condition rather than arrival time alone.
Rapid Maternal Assessment
The healthcare team evaluates bleeding, pain, blood pressure, breathing, consciousness, and other urgent warning signs.
Pregnancy-Focused Evaluation
The patient’s pregnancy stage, symptoms, fetal concerns, and obstetric history are considered during assessment.
Coordinated Diagnostic Support
Laboratory testing, blood typing, ultrasound, and other diagnostic services may be coordinated when ordered and available.
Continuous Monitoring
Patients may receive repeated monitoring of vital signs, bleeding, pain, consciousness, and response to treatment.
Admission and Referral Assistance
The emergency team may coordinate hospital admission, OB-Gyne consultation, urgent delivery care, or transfer based on the patient’s condition and hospital capabilities.
Compassionate and Private Care
We aim to provide respectful, confidential, and patient-centered assistance during sensitive and stressful medical situations.
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
The Emergency Department is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week for urgent pregnancy-related and women’s health concerns.
The hospital’s medical team should confirm whether an OB-Gyne specialist is physically present at all times or available through an on-call arrangement.
Possible symptoms include vaginal bleeding, pelvic or abdominal pain, one-sided cramping, shoulder pain, dizziness, or fainting. Ectopic pregnancy can become a life-threatening emergency.
Seek prompt care for a severe headache that does not improve, particularly when accompanied by vision changes, swelling of the hands or face, difficulty breathing, or upper-abdominal pain. These can be warning signs of preeclampsia.
Regular contractions that become stronger and closer together may indicate labor. Contractions or repeated uterine tightening before 37 weeks require urgent assessment for possible preterm labor.
Bring identification, prenatal records, laboratory or ultrasound results, medication information, and PhilHealth or insurance documents when available. Do not delay care when these items cannot be found immediately.
The emergency team may coordinate referral or transfer when the patient requires a specialist, procedure, neonatal service, blood product, surgery, intensive care, or level of maternity care not available at the hospital.
Appointment
Need Emergency Medical Care?
Our Emergency Department is available 24 hours a day for sudden illnesses, injuries, accidents, and other urgent health concerns.
Proceed directly to New Padre Garcia Hospital or contact the hospital for immediate assistance.