My daughter was a nucchal cord (APGAR 3/7/9) in hospital. That was a little too exciting. A little PPV, no problems now.
In 10 years, I got to quite a few deliveries where the baby was out, and the cord needed cutting, but only one where we actually delivered. The rest of the patients that I've taken to hospital in labour have stayed in labour until arrival.
This was a 29 week gestation premie, that weighed 1200g (not bad for gestational age:
http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/rhs-ssg/bwga-pnag/index-eng.php).
The mother had been smoking crack, started having abdo pain. Stood up in front of us, and freaked out as her membranes ruptured, and 8 mins later we had a tiny little neonate. Both baby and mother did well to the hospital -- although the baby developed RDS later and required NICU care.
I also arrived after the delivery of a term baby (in the bathtub) to a 20 year old who denied knowing she was pregnant. Her boyfriend also seemed quite suprised. She was not obese, and both denied any psych history.
So, for tips:-
- be aware of the potential for premature delivery in patients abusing cocaine
- (especially) premature babies need to be kept really warm. Crank the truck heater. If you're not sweating, it's not hot enough. They've just come from 37 degree weather, and their thermoregulatory systems are not mature (they'll go ketotic very easily if you let them get too cold).
- NRP is a good course, especially for paramedics.
- take a look at your ob kit before you have to use it.
- you need a neonatal bagger. Be aware you may need to depress / switch off the pop-off valve for the first couple of ventilations in a flat newborn. It can take a little bit of extra pressure to expand the lungs for the first time.
- only a fraction of all births require any aggressive care. The majority of these respond positively to 30-60 seconds of PPV. Actually having a neonate that requires CPR or epinephrine is very rare. But you should know how to these things well.
- I think childbirth/delivery/neonatal care is one of those skills that you really have to practice / refresh periodically. It's like cricothyrotomys, or central line insertion, pediatric arrest management. Even in a busy system, it's something you're going to see/do very rarely, so you can't rely on experience alone to carry you through. You need to periodically revisit these skills, because you may have to use them when you least expect it.