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ACNM Press Release: Women in Labor who Push without the "Urge" May Experience More Complications
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 26, 2002
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Women in Labor who Push without the "Urge"
May Experience More Complications
Washington, DC-2/26/2002-An in-depth review of the literature reveals
strong support for redefining the second stage of labor and decreasing the duration
of time pregnant women are instructed to push. In fact, letting the body make
gradual changes in the early phase of second stage labor, may actually shorten
the pushing phase and reduce the incidence of physiological stress in the mother,
acidosis in the neonate, instrument deliveries and damage to maternal perineal
structures, says Ohio State University School of Nursing Professor Joyce
Roberts, CNM, PhD. The results of the literature review and a call for more
research is reported in this month's Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health.
The second stage of labor, by definition, begins when the cervix is completely
thinned out (effaced) and open (dilated). It is at this point, when the door
leaving the uterus is open as wide as possible, that women in the US are typically
given active verbal and physical encouragement to help move the baby through
the birth canal (vagina) by pushing and pushing hard with every contraction.
Instructions on how to push, frequently result in repetitive and prolonged periods
of time when the mother-to-be is holding her breath There is evidence that the
duration of active pushing is associated with a build up of lactic acid in the
fetus (acidosis), due to maternal exhaustion and insufficient oxygen.
There is also good evidence that most women have a spontaneous, almost uncontrollable,
urge to push. With the increased utilization of epidural anesthesia and the
resultant loss of all sensation associated with delivery, most women and many
health care professionals have no knowledge of this variation in labor. Furthermore,
if routine pushing is the norm, it is likely that many nurses and doctors have
never thought to ask the woman if she feels like pushing. There does appear
to be an optimal anatomic relationship between the baby and the mother when
pushing will achieve its desired results. The lack of urge to push is most likely
due to the position of the unborn baby, i.e. how far the baby's head has traveled
down the birth canal and/or the angle assumed by the head as it travels through
the canal. Therefore, unless the mother has the urge to push or it is determined
that the head is well engaged in the pelvis, interventions that promote pushing
may do more harm than good.
"There have been numerous European investigators who have examined the
progression of second stage labor in phases and these data provide a strong
impetus to reconceptualize the second stage entirely," says Roberts, the
paper's author. "The idea is not to prolong labor so much as to let that
first phase transpire without intervention, then to maximize the overall effect
of pushing once the active phase of the second stage of labor begins."
Though this concept is not uncommon in Europe where there have been numerous
reports about less active pushing, it is a novelty in the United States. Frequently
cited obstetric textbooks provide little guidance as to the existence of distinct
phases during the second stage of labor, thus physicians have no reason to consider
altering their management. One possible explanation is the relatively low number
of midwife attended births in the US (approximately 10%) in comparison to the
number in other industrialized countries. To clarify safe parameters for the
second stage of labor, including length of each phase, positions that facilitate
progress and prevent trauma, and appropriate instructions for pushing, additional
research is needed
The complete study is available in the latest edition of the Journal of Midwifery
& Women's Health. Journalist can receive a complimentary copy at http://www.midwife.org/jmwh.
For more information, or to reach Joyce Roberts, contact Eric A. Dyson at 202-728-9876,
email edyson@acnm.org, or visit www.midwife.org.
# # #
The American College of Nurse-Midwives' mission is to promote the health and
well-being of women and infants within their families and communities through
the development and support of the profession of midwifery as practiced by certified
nurse-midwives and certified midwives. Midwives believe every individual has
the right to safe, satisfying health care with respect for human dignity and
cultural variations. ACNM is the oldest women's health care association in the
U.S., with origins dating to 1929.
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