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Original Articles

The association of hourly second-stage documentation with cesarean delivery and maternal blood loss

ORCID Icon, , & ORCID Icon
Pages 9511-9516 | Received 30 Nov 2021, Accepted 17 Feb 2022, Published online: 02 Mar 2022
 

Abstract

Purpose of the article

Cesarean rates and maternal morbidity increase with the duration of the second stage of labor. We studied the effect of hourly evaluation and documentation during the second stage of labor on maternal and fetal outcomes.

Materials and methods

We performed a retrospective cohort study of all women who delivered at our urban, tertiary care hospital and underwent a second stage of greater than 60 min between 1 June 2016 and 31 May 2019. There were 1498 patients with complete data. Four hundred forty patients had hourly evaluation and documentation throughout the second stage and 1058 did not. We performed t-tests, Chi-squared, and regression analyses to compare cesarean delivery rate, second-stage duration, quantitative blood loss, hemorrhage and blood transfusion rates, and fetal outcomes. We performed regression analyses to evaluate for independent effect of this intervention on each outcome.

Results

Patients with hourly evaluation and documentation had a decreased likelihood of cesarean delivery (8.2% vs. 20.3%, p < .001), shorter second-stage of labor (98.1 min vs. 177.5 min, p < .001), decreased quantitative blood loss (514.4 mL vs. 667.7 mL, p < .001), and hemorrhage rate (12.5% vs. 19.9%, p < .001). Hourly evaluation was associated with decreased transfusion rates (3.2% vs. 5.6%, p = .05) but was not related to the number of units transfused. Regression analyses confirmed the impact of hourly documentation when potential confounders were included. These differences in outcomes were also noted when evaluation was performed and documented within every 75 min. Hourly second-stage evaluation and documentation did not affect other maternal or infant morbidities.

Conclusion

Hourly evaluation and documentation in the second stage was associated with decreased cesarean delivery rate, second-stage duration, quantitative blood loss, hemorrhage, and transfusion.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability statement

This data has not been deposited in another site outside of the authors’ institution.

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