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Original Article

Women’s acute anxiety variations before and after epidural anesthesia for childbirth

, , , , &
Pages 152-158 | Received 26 May 2016, Accepted 12 Jan 2017, Published online: 08 Feb 2017
 

Abstract

Objective: This study assessed changes in anxiety during different phases of childbirth in a sample of women demanding epidural anesthesia.

Design: Prospective, longitudinal case series.

Sample: A total of 133 women who demanded epidural anesthesia for childbirth answered the questionnaires.

Methods: Anxiety state was measured using the State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) questionnaire. The STAI-S (anxiety state) was administered in three phases during childbirth: Phase 1 was before applying epidural anesthesia, Phase 2 was 45 min after the application of epidural anesthesia and Phase 3 was at less than 24 h after delivery. Data were collected in two general hospitals: a third-level public hospital and a well-recognized private hospital.

Main outcome measures: STAI scores.

Results: Anxiety state decreases significantly after applying the epidural anesthesia (Phase 2) compared to before anesthesia (Phase 1), and it remains low levels 24 h after childbirth (Phase 3). There were statistically significant differences in STAI scores between the different phases administrated (Phases 1 and 2: p < 0.001; effect size, d = 1.40; Phases 1 and 3: p < 0.001; effect size, d = 1.39). In Phase 3, women with cesarean section birth had significant differences in STAI scores relative to those with spontaneous birth (p = 0.037; d = 0.44). The type of health-care setting (public or private), the educational level and the numbers of previous births does not affect the level of anxiety state in women in any of the three phases.

Conclusions: Women’s anxiety decreases significantly after applying epidural anesthesia, and it remains low 24 h after delivery. Anxiety against childbirth was not influenced by the health system used by women, by the condition of primiparous or multiparous, or by the educational level. Women who received an epidural anesthesia with a cesarean section reported higher rates of anxiety state after birth.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge recruitment to patients by the staff members of the Nursing and Midwifery Unit of the Hospital 9 de Octubre, Valencia, Spain, and the Midwifery Division of the University Hospital La Fe, Valencia, Spain.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no competing interests. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

    Current knowledge on this subject

  • Anxiety trait and antenatal anxiety state are potential risk factors for postpartum mental health problems.

  • Anxiety arises from fear of pain, and the relief of pain reduces anxiety.

  • There are few previous studies that measured childbirth anxiety with a multi-phase approach including the impact of epidural anesthesia on pregnant women’s anxiety.

    What this study adds

  • This is the first study including a multi-phase approach to examine anxiety at three phases during childbirth: before administration of epidural anesthesia, immediately after the administration of epidural anesthesia and after birth.

  • The results confirm that the use of epidural anesthesia reduces not only pain but also women’s anxiety during labor.

  • In this sample, anxiety was unrelated to the type of health-care setting, the previous experience of births, and the educational level.

  • Anxiety state after birth was greater in women undergoing cesarean section than in those with a spontaneous birth.

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