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Maternal Burnout, Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy and Attachment Level

S

Sakarya University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pregnancy

Treatments

Other: pregnant women with

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07112495
OznurT.

Details and patient eligibility

About

Labor pain causes women to be afraid of vaginal delivery and to be anxious about delivery and therefore to prefer cesarean delivery (Ali Alahmari et al., 2020). The World Health Organization (WHO) has set the safe cesarean section rate for countries at 15% (World Health Organization, 2015). However, many countries are well above this rate (Betran et al., 2021). An important factor in the preference for cesarean deliveries is the fear of vaginal delivery (Zhao et al., 2021). Vaginal delivery with epidural anesthesia in primiparous women is a very good opportunity to prevent the preference of cesarean deliveries due to fear of vaginal delivery. Unless contraindicated, epidural analgesia should be offered to women to alleviate the pain felt with contractions during labor (Callahan et al., 2023).

Recently, women frequently prefer epidural anesthesia to avoid pain during vaginal delivery. Vaginal delivery with epidural anesthesia aims to minimize the pain of women during the trauma process and is the most effective pain method among pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions (Antonakou, & Papoutsis, 2016). The reason why vaginal delivery with epidural anesthesia is not widespread enough is that women are not given enough information about epidural anesthesia (Shishido et al., 2020).

Full description

Purpose: The aim of this study is to emphasize the importance of vaginal birth with epidural anesthesia in primiparous women (who will have their first birth) in order to reduce the effect of fear of vaginal birth on the choice of cesarean section and to evaluate the effect of increasing the level of knowledge about epidural anesthesia on birth preferences.

Objectives:

To determine the level of fear and anxiety of women regarding childbirth.

To examine the effect of fear of vaginal birth on the preference for cesarean section.

To evaluate the effectiveness of vaginal birth with epidural anesthesia in pain management.

To determine the level of knowledge of women about epidural anesthesia.

To increase the rate of preference for vaginal birth by providing information about epidural anesthesia.

To reveal the role of widespread use of epidural anesthesia in reducing cesarean section rates.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

19 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Having a normal vaginal delivery in the delivery room,
  • 19 to 45 years old
  • To be transferred to the Puerperium service after delivery,
  • The baby's APGAR score is 7 and above
  • 37 and above weeks of gestation
  • No complications in the baby and mother due to childbirth
  • Postnatal care by the mother's side
  • Mother and baby sharing the same room after birth until discharge,
  • The mother is breastfeeding her baby,
  • Mother's voluntary participation in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Separation of mother and baby for any reason while the mother is with the baby
  • Transfer of the baby to the NICU
  • Wanting to get out of the study.
  • Being a single parent
  • Those who cannot speak and write Turkish

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

80 participants in 2 patient groups

intervention
Experimental group
Description:
pregnant women receiving epidural
Treatment:
Other: pregnant women with
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
no pregnant women receiving epidural

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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