On the first post-partum day, 324 mothers completed a questionnaire designed to assess maternal perception of delivery room experience. Antenatal pain expectation, actual pain severity, analgesia received, as well as maternal satisfaction and choice of analgesia for future deliveries were recorded. Forty-five percent of primiparae and 36% of multiparae reported that they anticipated suffering extreme pain during delivery. The incidence of unbearable pain was similar among patients who received no analgesia or intravenous pethidine but significantly (P<0.0001) higher when compared to epidural analgesia. During the first stage of labour, continuous epidural analgesia was associated with severe or unbearable pain in 51% and 58% of primiparae and multiparae, respectively. The incidence of severe or unbearable pain during the second stage of labour was 43% and 46% for primiparae and multiparae, respectively. Patient satisfaction with epidural analgesia did not correlate with subjective pain scores. Among mothers who received continuous epidural analgesia 70% described their experience as good or excellent and 65.8% indicated that they would request similar pain relief in the future. Despite advances in obstetric analgesia, women anticipate and actually experience severe pain during childbirth. However, due to psychological and cultural factors, as well as possible post-partum euphoria, satisfaction with the delivery room experience is high.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0959-289x(98)80043-5 | DOI Listing |
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