Maternal and neonatal outcomes among spontaneous vaginal births occurring in or out of water following intrapartum water immersion: The POOL cohort study

Author:

Sanders Julia1ORCID,Barlow Christy2ORCID,Brocklehurst Peter3ORCID,Cannings‐John Rebecca2ORCID,Channon Susan2ORCID,Cutter Judith4ORCID,Hunter Billie1ORCID,Jokinen Mervi5,Lugg‐Widger Fiona2ORCID,Milosevic Sarah2ORCID,Gale Chris67ORCID,Milton Rebecca2ORCID,Morantz Leah8ORCID,Paranjothy Shantini9ORCID,Plachcinski Rachel8ORCID,Robling Michael210ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Healthcare Sciences Cardiff University Cardiff UK

2. Centre for Trials Research Cardiff University Cardiff UK

3. Birmingham Clinical Trials Unit University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

4. Cardiff and Vale University Health Board Cardiff UK

5. Royal College of Midwives London UK

6. Neonatal Medicine Chelsea and Westminster NHS Foundation Trust London UK

7. School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine Imperial College London London UK

8. Public and Patient Representative Cardiff UK

9. School of Medicine Institute of Applied Health Sciences Aberdeen UK

10. DECIPHer, Cardiff University Cardiff UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveWarm water immersion during labour provides women with analgesia and comfort. This cohort study aimed to establish among women using intrapartum water immersion analgesia, without antenatal or intrapartum risk factors, whether waterbirth is as safe for them and their babies as leaving the water before birth.DesignCohort study with non‐inferiority design.SettingTwenty‐six UK NHS maternity services.SampleA total of 73 229 women without antenatal or intrapartum risk factors, using intrapartum water immersion, between 1 January 2015 and 30 June 2022. The analysis excluded 12 827 (17.5%) women who received obstetric or anaesthetic interventions before birth.MethodsNon‐inferiority analysis of retrospective and prospective data captured in NHS maternity and neonatal information systems.Main outcome measuresMaternal primary outcome: obstetric anal sphincter injury (OASI) by parity; neonatal composite primary outcome: fetal or neonatal death, neonatal unit admission with respiratory support or administration of antibiotics within 48 hours of birth.ResultsRates of the primary outcomes were no higher among waterbirths compared with births out of water: rates of OASI among nulliparous women (waterbirth: 730/15 176 [4.8%] versus births out of water: 641/12 210 [5.3%]; adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.97, one‐sided 95% CI, −∞ to 1.08); rates of OASI among parous women (waterbirth: 269/24 451 [1.1%] versus births out of water 144/8565 [1.7%]; aOR 0.64, one‐sided 95% CI −∞ to 0.78) and rates of the composite adverse outcome among babies (waterbirth 263/9868 [2.7%] versus births out of water 224/5078 [4.4%]; aOR 0.65, one‐sided 95% CI −∞ to 0.79).ConclusionAmong women using water immersion during labour, remaining in the pool and giving birth in water was not associated with an increase in the incidence of adverse primary maternal or neonatal outcomes.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Evaluating waterbirth risks: A deep dive into the POOL cohort study's research gaps;BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology;2024-08-12

2. Delivering in or out of water, the OASI rates in the POOL cohort study are disturbingly high;BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology;2024-08-08

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