Background: The peanut ball has only been recently used as a support for women labouring with epidurals. The peanut ball is shaped like a peanut and fits snugly between the woman's legs so that both legs are maintained as opening the pelvic outlet to increase the progress of labour and facilitate descent of the fetal head. Using position changes during labour to enhance widening of the pelvic outlet can be beneficial but a woman who has an epidural is limited in the number of positions she can adopt. No randomised controlled trial has been implemented in Australia to establish the effectiveness of a peanut ball specifically for women using epidurals during labour, and this project addresses this gap. The main aim of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility and practicality of conducting and replicating this trial to a definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT).
Methods: A minimum number of 50 women (25 in each trial arm), who are using an epidural in labour at two hospitals in NSW over a 1-year period, will be recruited and randomly allocated into a group that uses the peanut ball or into a group that does not use the peanut ball. Primary study objectives include assessing the proportion of women willing to be randomised, retention/attrition rates, and with associated reasons. Data will be collected on key clinical outcomes (natural birth rate, length of stay) with means and variances estimated between trial arms. This will inform the appropriate powering of a future definitive RCT. Secondary study objectives will include investigating the completion and acceptability of health and satisfaction surveys and assess the feasibility of conducting an economic evaluation alongside a future trial.
Discussion: This is a two-armed randomised controlled pilot trial. Outcomes from this pilot will inform a larger trial at a tertiary hospital.
Trial Registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, ACTRN12618000662268.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-018-0346-9 | DOI Listing |
Arch Gynecol Obstet
August 2024
Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Midwifery, Selcuk University, Konya, Turkey.
Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of using peanut balls on labor pain, fatigue, and the mother's perception of labor.
Methods: This is a randomized controlled intervention trial. Data were collected from the Intervention (peanut ball) and Control groups between July 2022 and June 2023, with 45 pregnant women in each group.
Am Fam Physician
June 2024
Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health Family Medicine Residency Program, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Pregnancy dating is determined by the patient's last menstrual period or an ultrasound measurement. A full-term pregnancy is considered 37 weeks' gestation or more. Spontaneous labor begins when regular painful uterine contractions result in a cervical change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm Fam Physician
April 2024
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
J Physiother
April 2024
Postgraduate Program of Rehabilitation and Functional Performance, University of Pernambuco, Petrolina, Brazil. Electronic address:
Question: What is the effect of a protocol targeted at the various stages of labour - with a peanut ball, positioning and pelvic mobility - on the duration of labour, pain severity, fatigue, maternal outcomes, neonatal outcomes and satisfaction in parturients without analgesia?
Design: A randomised trial with concealed allocation, blinding of assessors and intention-to-treat analysis.
Participants: One hundred women in active labour.
Intervention: The experimental group received the protocol targeted at the various stages of labour, with a peanut ball, positioning and pelvic mobility, whilst the control group received usual care.
Heliyon
September 2023
Departamento de Sanidad Animal, Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de León, 24071, León, Spain.
Badgers () are a major tuberculosis (TB) reservoir in Europe, with the potential to transmit infection to cattle. Here we assessed whether a recently described oral tuberculosis vaccine based on heat-inactivated (HIMB) delivered as edible baits, can protect badgers from infection. Eight badgers were given individually five baits, each one consisting of a ball of peanut butter, natural peanut and oat flakes including a dose of the vaccine containing 5 × 10 colony-forming units.
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