Abstract
Objectives to evaluate maternal labour pain, fatigue, duration of the second stage of labour, the women's bearing-down experiences and the newborn infant Apgar scores when spontaneous pushing is used in an upright position. Design quasi-experimental study. Setting medical centre in Taichung, Taiwan. Participants 66 women giving birth at the hospital, with 33 primigravidas assigned to each group. Interventions during the second stage of labour, the women in the experimental group pushed from an upright position and were given support to push spontaneously; the women in the control group pushed from a supine position and were supported via Valsalva pushing. Outcome measures pain scores were recorded at two evaluation time points: at 10 cm of cervical dilation and one hour after the first pain score evaluation. One to four hours after childbirth, the trained nurses collected the fatigue and pushing experience scores. Findings the women in the experimental group had a lower pain index (5.67 versus 7.15, p=0.01), lower feelings of fatigue post birth (53.91 versus 69.39, p<0.001), a shorter duration of the second stage of labour (91.0 versus 145.97, p=0.02) and more positive labour experiences (39.88 versus 29.64, p<0.001) compared with the control group. There was no significant difference in the Apgar score for newborn infants during either the first minute (7.70 versus 7.73, p=0.72) or the fifth minute (8.91 versus 8.94, p=0.64). Key conclusions the pushing intervention during the second stage of labour lessened pain and fatigue, shortened the pushing time and enhanced the pushing experience. Implications for practice pushing interventions can yield increased satisfaction levels for women giving birth.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have