New studies focus on pushing during labor
New research examines labor management, including when to push, during delivery
Some four million babies are born each year in the United States alone, and millions more have arrived since obstetricians first began managing labor and delivery. Yet physicians still know little about the management of labor, particularly the crucial second stage when patients need clear, informed direction as to when they should push or delay trying to push the baby out.
“Once a woman progresses through labor, from zero to complete cervical dilation, it is heartbreaking to have a Caesarian section,” says Methodius Tuuli, MD, MPH, a Washington University obstetrician and maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, as well as a Women’s Reproductive Health Research Scholar. “Yet we have very little information about managing the second stage: for example, whether to push when the woman has the urge or when she has a contraction.”
Tuuli and several colleagues—particularly Alison Cahill, MD, MSCI, and Heather Frey, MD, both Washington University maternal-fetal medicine specialists at Barnes-Jewish Hospital—have published four recent research papers, two in the American Journal of Perinatology and two in Obstetrics and Gynecology, dealing with this laboring-down or delayed pushing period of labor. Three were studies of individuals who delivered at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and one was a meta-analysis, combining theresults of all prior randomized trials. Funding for this work came from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Delayed pushing outcomes
One study identified factors that influence the use of delayed pushing: high fetal station (positioning of the baby’s head), anesthesia use (such as epidurals), maternal body mass index over 25, among others. Another correlated delayed pushing in morbidly obese patients with longer active pushing. In a third, delayed pushing seemed to correspond to lower rates of spontaneous vaginal delivery and increased adverse outcomes to mother and baby. The fourth suggested few clinical differences in outcome.
Overall, these studies highlighted the need for more investigation of second-stage management. Tuuli and colleagues have already assembled investigators from Washington University and three additional medical centers—the University of Pennsylvania, University of Alabama and Oregon Health Science University—to collaborate on research comparing immediate and delayed pushing. “There is an urgent need for well-designed, randomized trials to provide evidence for practice,” says Tuuli.