Read Oxford Handbook of Midwifery Online
Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker
CHAPTER 11
Normal labour: first stage
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CHAPTER 11
Normal labour: first stage
208
Support for women in labour
Research has shown that where women are supported through their birth experience by midwives in birth units or midwife-led areas there is:
These outcomes rely on the following aspects relating to care.
of movement, optimal positioning.
2
Reassurance is provided about physical changes and symptoms that occur during labour, e.g. show, rupture of membranes, feeling nauseated.
• Resentment: due to personal circumstances and difficult relationships
Unrealistic expectations are addressed with sensitivity. Relaxation techniques, breathing awareness, and dialogue are encouraged to help allay fears.
SUPPORT FOR WOMEN IN LABOUR
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of personal identity or loss of assertiveness to express her needs and anxieties.
supporter (partner, friend, sister, mother) has been shown to result in shorter labours and less intervention.
1,2
Providing the opportunity to discuss the woman’s labour afterwards, to clear up any concerns or confusion.
Social Science and Medicine
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(6), 1330–40.
CHAPTER 11
Normal labour: first stage
210
High- and low-risk labour
Determining whether a woman falls into a high- or low-risk category for labour is dependent on her previous medical and obstetric history. This will have been recorded in her notes at the booking visit, and recommen- dations made for her care in labour. For a list of these, b see Screening for risk in pregnancy, p. 56.
Sometimes a woman may have had a theoretical risk factor during pregnancy which may have been resolved, e.g. a fetal abnormality which has been investigated and all is normal, or a woman with active herpes which has been treated and is not active when she presents in labour. Therefore, there may be overlapping situations where decisions are not verified until a woman commences labour.
Take a full and detailed account of the woman’s current obstetric and medical health when she presents in labour.
In addition to the antenatal risk factors, circumstances may occur in the current pregnancy and early labour stage that will require high-risk care:
A low-risk labour may be viewed as one where the woman commences labour having experienced an uneventful pregnancy, is in good physical
health, and has no known risk factors that would interfere with the normal physiological course of labour and birth.
Always discuss, and take into account, the woman’s individual needs and choices before making decisions about care in labour.
PRINCIPLES OF CARE FOR LOW-RISK WOMEN
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Principles of care for low-risk women
Since the inception of medically managed care for labour and birth, there has been a steep rise in intervention and assisted birth, among a popula- tion of women who invariably have uncomplicated pregnancies. In view of the evidence to support midwives managing low-risk women in labour, it is important that the midwife is confident in all aspects of midwifery care to support women’s choices and to enhance normal physiological principles.
1
The midwife needs to assess suitability for low-risk care based on individual needs and predisposing conditions.
Assessment