Midwife visits for the first 6 weeks
What the visits are for
These visits provide you with the help and support that you need. The midwife will also check on your baby’s development and arrange for extra support if this is needed.
When your pēpi is around 6 weeks old, you are returned to the care of your healthcare provider. Your midwife will transfer your notes to your healthcare provider.
Your baby’s care will be transferred to a Well Child Tamariki Ora nurse at around 6 weeks. They will get free regular health checks from the nurse up to 5 years of age. You will also need to enrol your pēpi with a general practice.
Your child's doctor and practice nurse — Ministry of Health (external link)
How often you will have visits
At your first visit, you and your midwife will work out the schedule of visits for the next 4 to 6 weeks. This will be based on your needs and their way of working.
If you need more visits in this time than you have scheduled, contact your midwife for an extra visit.
The first week visit
At one of the visits when your pēpi is around a week old your midwife will check your baby’s health and development again. Your midwife will also check that you are healthy and well.
What your midwife will do
At your baby’s first week check, your midwife will:
- ask about breastfeeding and offer help if you need it
- check that your pēpi is healthy and well, and measure their length, weight and head size
- check that your pēpi can see and hear well
- check your baby’s development
- ask about where your pēpi sleeps
- take a small amount of blood from your baby’s heel (the heel prick test) if you agree to the test and it has not already been done
- talk about how you are and how you are getting on, including your experience of the birth, being a new parent, your mood, your whānau, smoking, drinking and drugs, money worries, and family.
Heel prick test — National Screening Unit (external link)
Things to talk about at the visit
The visit is a good time to talk with your midwife about your pēpi and being a parent. You could talk about:
- your baby’s feeding and breastfeeding
- safe sleeping for your pēpi
- what your baby’s behaviour means, for example crying
- immunisation
- knowing when your pēpi is sick and what to do about it
- being smokefree
- car seats and car safety
- how to enrol your baby with a Well Child Tamariki Ora provider, a general practice, and the Community Oral Health Service
- keeping yourself healthy and well, and where to ask for help when you need it
- whānau relationships.
The last visit
The last visit with your midwife is when your pēpi is 4 to 6 weeks old. Remember to have your baby's My Health Book with you.
Well Child Tamariki Ora My Health Book — HealthEd (external link)
What your midwife will do
During the visit the midwife will:
- ask about breastfeeding and offer help if you need it
- ask you about the birth if you do not bring it up
- ask what you would like to change for the next birth
- check how you are feeling and ask questions to check that you are well
- revisit earlier discussions about contraception and, if you wish, give you a prescription
- check that your pēpi is healthy and well, and measure their length, weight and head size
- check that your pēpi can see and hear well
- check your baby’s development
- ask questions about your health and wellbeing, including family violence
- hand your baby’s care to your Well Child Tamariki Ora nurse
- refer your pēpi to the doctor or practice nurse for their 6-week immunisations
- give you an anonymous feedback form about the midwife care to be sent for the midwife’s review.
- National Immunisation Schedule
- Feedback — New Zealand College of Midwives (external link)
Handover to Well Child Tamariki Ora
Your midwife refers you to Well Child Tamariki Ora services at about 3 weeks, so there is a handover period from maternity care to your Well Child Tamariki Ora nurse between 4 and 6 weeks. The nurse will ring you to make a time to visit you. This handover to the nurse will be discussed and decided between you and your midwife.