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Postpartum Pelvic Floor Workshop (PPFW)

H

Hamilton Health Sciences (HHS)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pelvic Floor Disorders
Perineum; Injury
Pelvic Floor Muscle Weakness
Pelvic Floor; Incompetency

Treatments

Behavioral: Pelvic floor workshop

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04754984
2020-10672

Details and patient eligibility

About

After having a baby, there are some expected changes in pelvic floor function. However, tearing of the pelvic floor, having a large baby and needing a vacuum or forceps to deliver the baby put women at risk for having pelvic floor disorders. Our study aims to see if, in women who had a high risk for pelvic floor disorders, a pelvic floor education workshop four weeks after delivery can improve pelvic floor disorders compared to those that did not have a workshop.

Full description

There is compelling evidence for the need for perineal education and care, especially in women who have recognized risk factors. For example, 30-50% of women who have a clinically recognized risk factor report anal incontinence, fecal urgency, dyspareunia and perineal pain. Despite this, a study found that less than 50% of women with anal incontinence voice those symptoms unless directly asked about them.

Some authors discuss how women may not share these symptoms with their care providers out of the belief that it is a "normal" effect of childbirth. A review of the literature shows that antenatal educational workshops can be an effective means to provide pregnant women with information regarding pelvic floor health, including how modes of delivery impact pelvic floor function. Similarly, antenatal pelvic floor workshops have been found to improve patients' knowledge on pelvic floor health, their practice of pelvic floor muscle exercises and their confidence with these exercises.

To our knowledge, there is no literature exploring the role of a postpartum pelvic floor workshop, on managing perineal and pelvic floor symptoms in women who are identified as being at higher risk of developing pelvic floor dysfunction. Our goal is to develop and assess such a workshop.

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 50 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Postpartum (ie no more than 4 weeks postpartum at time of group allocation)

  • Vaginal delivery

  • Sustained one or more of the following insults to perineum/pelvic floor

    • Third or fourth degree laceration
    • Vacuum or forceps assisted vaginal delivery
    • Delivery of macrosomic infant ≥4000g)

Exclusion criteria

  • Prior pelvic floor physiotherapy treatment
  • Prior surgical management for pelvic organ prolapse or incontinence
  • Unable to understand English
  • Caesarean delivery
  • Concerns for patient sensitivity - eg if team is aware of neonatal demise, neonate unwell in NICU etc

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
One-time in-person workshop with pelvic floor physiotherapist
Treatment:
Behavioral: Pelvic floor workshop
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard care

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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