The Effectiveness of the Applications Made in Line With the Algorithm for Coping With Labor Pain
NCT ID: NCT04883047
Last Updated: 2021-07-08
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
64 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-05-25
2021-06-25
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Although labor pain is a physiological and natural process, when the woman cannot cope with labor pain, the health of the mother and fetus is adversely affected. These negative effects mostly focus on the respiratory system, cardiovascular system, neuroendocrine and limbic system. During birth, the mother becomes exhausted due to pain and has to use all her energy to cope with the pain. When the mother cannot cope, she becomes tired, and her oxygen requirement, blood pressure and cardiac out-put increase. Fear and anxiety caused by labor pain increase the release of stress hormones such as adrenaline, noradrenaline and corticosteroid. These hormones reduce the blood flow to the uterus and cause distress in the fetus by reducing the amount of oxygen in the placental flow. In addition, due to the increased adrenaline, it causes a decrease in the amount of oxytocin during delivery. This causes prolongation of labor and more bleeding. At the same time, when the woman is able to cope with labor pain, the formation of tetany in the pregnant woman is prevented by preventing hyper ventilation and hypocapnia formation.
When the mother can effectively cope with the pain of labor, she starts motherhood with a positive experience, experiences the happiness of actively participating in the birth of the baby, can participate in practices with health professionals, and the problems that may be seen in the newborn are reduced since there is no need for medication. In this respect, it is extremely important for the mother, baby and family to end the birth process in the best possible way. For this reason, nursing care includes emotional, physical, spiritual and psychosocial continuous birth support and coping with the pain of labor. Providing non-pharmacological pain relief methods such as relaxation and breathing exercises, massage, positioning, therapeutic communication, listening to music, hot-cold application, partner and family support, providing home environment is associated with a positive birth experience. Accordingly, the "algorithm for coping with labor pain" developed by Roberts et al. (2010) includes the interventions that should be done to cope with the pain at birth. The algorithm for coping with labor pain has two branches. One is the arm that shows pregnant ways of coping with pain, such as rhythmic activity, deep breathing, inner focus, relaxation between contractions, which gives clues to healthcare professionals; Another is the arm that enables the evaluation of the findings that show that the woman cannot cope with labor pain such as clenching her teeth, crying, and inability to focus. According to the algorithm, when a woman can cope with labor pain, there is no need to do any intervention. However, when the woman cannot cope with labor pain, it is easier for the woman to cope with labor pain with holistic birth support strategies such as providing physical comfort, emotional comfort, informative support and advocacy.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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experiment
Women in the experimental group will be given care at the first stage of labor (will start in the latent phase) using Integrated Birth Support Strategies created in line with the Algorithm for Coping with Birth Pain.
Among the interventions made into a checklist, the interventions applied to the woman will be marked by the midwives and nurses working in the delivery room. The Scale for Coping with Birth Pain (DABS), which will be applied once in each phase (latent phase, active phase and transition phase), will guide the delivery of care; Care practices will differ depending on the woman's ability to cope with labor pain.At least 3 of each sub-heading of the physical comfort parameter, at least 1 of each sub-heading of the parameter of providing emotional comfort, at least 2 of each sub-heading of informative support and advocacy sub-parameters will be applied to pregnant women by midwives / nurses working in the delivery room.
holistic birth support strategies
Holistic Birth Support Strategies are composed of birth-supporting practices that were created by Horn and D'Angelo (2017) within the scope of the "Algorithm for Coping with Birth Pain" and recommended for coping with labor pain. Holistic Birth Support Strategies; It includes four parameters: physical comfort, emotional comfort, informative support and advocacy.
control
Pregnant women assigned to the control group will be followed up with the routine care applied in the delivery room.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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holistic birth support strategies
Holistic Birth Support Strategies are composed of birth-supporting practices that were created by Horn and D'Angelo (2017) within the scope of the "Algorithm for Coping with Birth Pain" and recommended for coping with labor pain. Holistic Birth Support Strategies; It includes four parameters: physical comfort, emotional comfort, informative support and advocacy.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Not being a risky pregnant (gestational diabetes, hypertension, preeclampsia etc.)
* Not having any communication problems (mental, auditory, visual, etc.)
Exclusion Criteria
* Not wanting to participate in interventions applied in line with the algorithm for coping with labor pain
* Willing to leave the research
* Delivery by cesarean section
18 Years
45 Years
FEMALE
Yes
Sponsors
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Gazi University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Pinar Akbas
Expert Nurse, Doctoral student
Principal Investigators
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Şengül YAMAN SÖZBİR, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Gazi Universty
Locations
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Karabük Training and Research Hospital
Karabük, , Turkey (Türkiye)
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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laborpain
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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