Irish Wedding News
19/10/2017
Professor Peter Brocklehurst and Professor Christine McArthur, statistics lead Pollyanna Hardy of the University of Birmingham, and their colleagues within the Epidural and Position Trial Collaborative Group were behind the randomised controlled trial known as BUMPES.
The trial, which was funded by the National Institute for Health Research with the findings published in The BMJ, involved 3,093 women who gave birth across 41 UK hospitals between October 2010 and January 2014.
The aim of the trial was to investigate whether adopting an upright position in the second stage of labour in first-time mothers who have a low-dose epidural would lead to an increase in the number who had a spontaneous vaginal birth, without the need for forceps or suction.
Women were randomly allocated an upright or lying down position – lying on the left or right side – during the later stages of labour and the study found that there were fewer spontaneous vaginal births in women in the upright group (35.2%), compared with women in the lying down group (41.1%). This represents a 5.9% absolute increase in the chance of spontaneous birth in the lying down group.
In the UK, around 30% of women choose to have an epidural as it is the most effective form of pain relief in labour. However, having an epidural leads to an increased risk of an instrumental vaginal birth (forceps or vacuum).
The position a woman is in during the second stage of labour, after the cervix is fully dilated, has been suggested to have an effect on the risk of an instrumental vaginal birth and current existing guidance in the UK recommends that women with an epidural should be encouraged to adopt an upright position.
Commenting on the findings, Professor Brocklehurst, of the Institute of Applied Health Research at the University of Birmingham, said: "The study provides evidence that first time mothers with an epidural who lie down on their side during the second stage of labour are more likely to have a spontaneous vaginal birth, with no apparent disadvantages in relation to short or longer term outcomes for mother or baby.
"Like all clinical trials, the study does have its limitations and we can only speculate about the mechanism by which a lying down position increases the chance of a spontaneous vaginal birth.
"However, the evidence we have found from this large trial group provides an easy and cost-free intervention in our labour wards. Pregnant women, in consultation with their healthcare providers, can now make informed choices about their position in the second stage of labour.
"The results from this trial apply only to first-time mothers in the second stage of labour with low dose epidural analgesia. Therefore it is unclear what the findings may mean for women who have given birth before and are in labour with an epidural.
"However, given the clear benefit of the lying down position, perhaps all women who have an epidural should be offered the choice of adopting a lying down position in the second stage until we know otherwise."
It has been suggested that the results of the BUMPES trial "strongly support" the need for a similar large trial to find the best position for women in the second stage of labour who do not have an epidural.
(JP/LM)
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Lying Down In Later Stages Of Labour 'Could Help First-Time Mums'
A new study has claimed that first-time mothers, who adopt a lying down position rather than being upright in the later stages of labour – and who have had a low dose epidural – could lead them to having a higher chance of them delivering their baby without any medical intervention.Professor Peter Brocklehurst and Professor Christine McArthur, statistics lead Pollyanna Hardy of the University of Birmingham, and their colleagues within the Epidural and Position Trial Collaborative Group were behind the randomised controlled trial known as BUMPES.
The trial, which was funded by the National Institute for Health Research with the findings published in The BMJ, involved 3,093 women who gave birth across 41 UK hospitals between October 2010 and January 2014.
The aim of the trial was to investigate whether adopting an upright position in the second stage of labour in first-time mothers who have a low-dose epidural would lead to an increase in the number who had a spontaneous vaginal birth, without the need for forceps or suction.
Women were randomly allocated an upright or lying down position – lying on the left or right side – during the later stages of labour and the study found that there were fewer spontaneous vaginal births in women in the upright group (35.2%), compared with women in the lying down group (41.1%). This represents a 5.9% absolute increase in the chance of spontaneous birth in the lying down group.
In the UK, around 30% of women choose to have an epidural as it is the most effective form of pain relief in labour. However, having an epidural leads to an increased risk of an instrumental vaginal birth (forceps or vacuum).
The position a woman is in during the second stage of labour, after the cervix is fully dilated, has been suggested to have an effect on the risk of an instrumental vaginal birth and current existing guidance in the UK recommends that women with an epidural should be encouraged to adopt an upright position.
Commenting on the findings, Professor Brocklehurst, of the Institute of Applied Health Research at the University of Birmingham, said: "The study provides evidence that first time mothers with an epidural who lie down on their side during the second stage of labour are more likely to have a spontaneous vaginal birth, with no apparent disadvantages in relation to short or longer term outcomes for mother or baby.
"Like all clinical trials, the study does have its limitations and we can only speculate about the mechanism by which a lying down position increases the chance of a spontaneous vaginal birth.
"However, the evidence we have found from this large trial group provides an easy and cost-free intervention in our labour wards. Pregnant women, in consultation with their healthcare providers, can now make informed choices about their position in the second stage of labour.
"The results from this trial apply only to first-time mothers in the second stage of labour with low dose epidural analgesia. Therefore it is unclear what the findings may mean for women who have given birth before and are in labour with an epidural.
"However, given the clear benefit of the lying down position, perhaps all women who have an epidural should be offered the choice of adopting a lying down position in the second stage until we know otherwise."
It has been suggested that the results of the BUMPES trial "strongly support" the need for a similar large trial to find the best position for women in the second stage of labour who do not have an epidural.
(JP/LM)
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