Millions of Newborns Worldwide Are Not Breathing at Delivery Every Year, and the Vast Majority
Of Them Need some Kind of Infant Resuscitation. Safe and Healthy Babies Can Only Be Ensured If Delivery
Room Staff Has a Solid Grasp of Infant Resuscitation Techniques. Finding Out How Well-Versed Nurses Are
In Neonatal Resuscitation Was the Driving Force For This Research. to Assess Nurses' Familiarity With
Neonatal Resuscitation Techniques, a Descriptive Cross-Sectional Research Was Conducted. Participants
Were Chosen Using a Census-Style Random Selection Process. the 86 Nurses Working In the Maternity
Ward of the Non-Governmental Health Institution In the Parsa District Were Interviewed Using a Semistructured
Interview Schedule, and Their Skills Were Evaluated Using an Observational Rating Scale. 93 Of
Respondents Had Insufficient Knowledge (85 Score) and 90.7 Had Insufficient Ability (85 Score) In
Newborn Resuscitation, According to the Study's Results. There Are Statistically Significant Correlations
Between the Amount of Time Spent In the Workforce (P=0.034), Time Spent Working In a Maternity Ward
(P=0.028), and Completion of Newborn Resuscitation Training (P=0.001), All of Which Contribute to a Higher
Level of Competence When It Comes to Resuscitating Newborns. Findings Showed a Good Connection
Between Respondents' Knowledge Score and Ability Score on the Same Question About Infant
Resuscitation (P0.0018). In This Study Discuss the Knowledge and Skill Among Nurses Regarding B ...