Business Standard

Giving birth in water appears safe for mother and infant

- WILL BOGGS

Increasing numbers of women choose to labor and give birth in water, particular­ly in midwifery-led settings, so it is important to understand the benefits and possible risks for women and their newborns.

Elizabeth R Cluett from University of Southampto­n in the UK and colleagues evaluated the effects of water immersion during labor and/or birth using informatio­n from 15 studies involving a total of 3,663 women.

Immersion had no meaningful effect on rates of spontaneou­s vaginal delivery, vaginal delivery with the help of forceps or other devices, or cesarean section, the authors reported in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.

Women who went through the first stage of labor with immersion were slightly less likely than women without immersion to need an epidural.

There was not enough informatio­n to determine whether waterbirth affected the rates of moderate to severe tears in the perineum, the area between the vagina and the anus, or the amount of blood loss during labor and delivery.

There was no evidence that immersion increased unwanted effects to the baby or woman, regardless of the stage of labor when immersion took place.

There are several caveats to these findings. All the studies took place in hospital labor and delivery units, and none of the studies took place in midwiferyl­ed care settings. Most studies did not indicate whether it was the first time a woman had given birth or it was a later pregnancy. And there was a lack of informatio­n about how selective the studies were on which women they included.

For all these reasons, the researcher­s suggest that “further research is needed particular­ly for waterbirth and its use in birth settings outside hospital labor wards before we can be more certain of these effects. Research is also needed about women’s and caregivers’ experience­s of labor and birth in water.”

Thomas G Poder from CIUSSS de l’Estrie- CHUS, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada, who has also reviewed the advantages and disadvanta­ges of waterbirth, told Reuters Health by email, “(The current study) missed some important points, that is, maternal relaxation and satisfacti­on (and) promotion of a model of obstetric care more focused on the needs of mothers, particular­ly the empowermen­t of women to realize their full potential.”

“Waterbirth is safe if properly managed,” he said. “So, this should be a choice offered to mothers.” Megan Cooper, researcher and lecturer in midwifery and nursing at University of South Australia in Adelaide recently surveyed midwives regarding their waterbirth experience­s and last year analyzed Australian policies and guidelines for water immersion during labor and birth. She told Reuters Health by email, “Water immersion for labor and birth is a safe option for women who are at low risk of complicati­ons. As both a method of pain relief and an alternate mode of birth, water immersion is associated with positive outcomes that extend beyond the physical. Not only does water immersion support women to achieve a physiologi­cal and non-medicalize­d labor and birth, but women commonly have a more positive birth experience.”

“There is increasing demand for options of care that can offer women alternativ­es to pharmacolo­gical analgesia and improved chances of having a normal physiologi­cal birth,” she said. “We have an ever increasing evidence base that demonstrat­es that water immersion provides such an alternativ­e without any increased risk to the woman or baby. Despite this, there remains a lack of support for this option in some settings, possibly due to the fear of adverse events, that for the most part, are documented as possible or theoretica­l.”

Reuters

 ??  ?? There was no evidence that immersion increased unwanted effects to the baby or woman
There was no evidence that immersion increased unwanted effects to the baby or woman

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