Women's reflections on induction of labour and birthing interventions and what they would do differently next time: A content analysis.

Midwifery

School of Nursing and Midwifery, Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith 2751 NSW Australia. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Birth Experience Study (BESt) in Australia analyzed women's feelings about labor induction (IOL) and found rising dissatisfaction and trauma related to childbirth.
  • Of 591 survey responses, most women (93.3%) wished to resist IOL in future pregnancies, focusing on being better informed and delaying IOL unless absolutely necessary.
  • A small group (6.7%) accepted IOL as justified, but even they desired more control and input about their birthing process in the future.

Article Abstract

Background: Induction of labour (IOL) and birth intervention is increasingly conducted in Australia, and rates of maternal dissatisfaction and birth trauma are also on the rise.

Methods: The Birth Experience Study (BESt) national survey was conducted to explore women's experiences of birthing in Australia. This content analysis categorises components pertaining to IOL, and women's responses to the open-ended question: "Would you do anything different if you were to have another baby?"

Findings: In total, 591 responses on IOL resulted in 819 coded comments being coded into multiple categories/subcategories. In the first main category 'increasing the chance of a spontaneous labour next time by resisting IOL' (93.3 %), three subcategories were identified: 'I would resist the pressure or refuse, especially if not a good indication' (54.8 %, 419); 'I will await spontaneous onset or delay the IOL until later' (25.0 %, 191); and 'I will be better informed next time' (20.2 %, 154). In the second main category 'accepting IOL was necessary or desirable' (6.7 %), two subcategories were identified: 'my IOL was justified or desired' (38.2 %, 21) and 'my IOL was justified or desired, but if there is a next time, I'd want more say in what happens' (61.8 %, 34).

Conclusion: Overwhelmingly women expressed a desire to avoid IOL, along with the intention to: resist pressure, allow more time for spontaneous labour onset, and arm themselves with more knowledge to advocate against non-medically indicated justifications. Amongst the minority accepting of their previous IOLs, the majority stated wanting more say regarding when and how IOL was conducted.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.midw.2024.104201DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

iol
9
induction labour
8
content analysis
8
main category
8
spontaneous labour
8
subcategories identified
8
resist pressure
8
'my iol
8
iol justified
8
women's reflections
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!