Publication | Open Access
Effectiveness of pain relief in labour: survey of 1000 mothers
74
Citations
7
References
1982
Year
Family MedicinePain TherapyLive ChildPain MedicineGynecologyOperative Vaginal DeliverySurgeryIntrapartum CarePainless LabourPain ManagementHealth SciencesPostoperative Pain ManagementAssisted DeliveryMaternal HealthPain ResearchNursingPain TreatmentPain ReliefAnesthesiaMedicineWomen's HealthAnesthesiology
The amount of pain that had been experienced by 1000 women during vaginal delivery of a live child was determined by interview within 48 hours of delivery. Patients had been offered a choice of analgesia, and 536 had received epidural analgesia: pain relief was greatest in this group, just over half having had a painless labour. The duration of pain was also reduced by a third in this group even though patients who had received an epidural block had tended to have longer labour and an incidence of assisted delivery of 51% compared with 6% in the remainder. Seventy-two per cent of the patients receiving an epidural had had as much pain as they had expected. A similar proportion (70%) was reported with simpler analgesic methods, suggesting that women may expect a certain amount of pain in labour and request further analgesic treatment when this is exceeded.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1