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Medical views on doulas
Here is a sample of
what the medical literature says about doulas : Over 15 studies have been
carried out around the world, demonstrating the many benefits of hiring
a doula. Here is the latest review and a few others:
Continuous support for women during childbirth
(Cochrane Review) Hodnett ED, Gates S,
Hofmeyr G J, Sakala C. Continuous support for women during childbirth
(Cochrane Review). In: The Cochrane Library, Issue 3, 2003.
Main results: Fifteen trials involving 12,791 women are included.
Primary comparison: Women who had continuous intrapartum support
were less likely to have intrapartum analgesia, operative birth,
or to report dissatisfaction with their childbirth experiences.
Subgroup analyses: In general, continuous intrapartum support
was associated with greater benefits when the provider was not
a member of the hospital staff, when it began early in labour,
and in settings in which epidural analgesia was not routinely
available. Reviewers' conclusions: All
women should have support throughout labour and birth.
The obstetrical and postpartum benefits of continuous
support during childbirth. Scott KD, Klaus
PH, Klaus MH. J Womens Health Gend Based Med 1999 Dec;8(10):1257-64
Division of Public Health, County of Sonoma Department of Health
Services, Santa Rosa, California 95404, USA.
The purpose of this article is to review the evidence regarding
the effectiveness of continuous support provided by a trained
laywoman (doula) during childbirth on obstetrical and postpartum
outcomes. Twelve individual randomized trials have compared obstetrical
and postpartum outcomes between doula-supported women and women
who did not receive doula support during childbirth. Three meta-analyses,
which used different approaches, have been performed on the results
of the clinical trials. Emotional and physical
support significantly shortens labor and decreases the need for
cesarean deliveries, forceps and vacuum extraction, oxytocin augmentation,
and analgesia. Doula-supported mothers also rate childbirth as
less difficult and painful than do women not supported by a doula.
Labor support by fathers does not appear to produce similar obstetrical
benefits. Eight of the 12 trials report early or late psychosocial
benefits of doula support. Early benefits include reductions in
state anxiety scores, positive feelings about the birth experience,
and increased rates of breastfeeding initiation. Later postpartum
benefits include decreased symptoms of depression, improved self-esteem,
exclusive breastfeeding, and increased sensitivity of the mother
to her child's needs. The results of these 12
trials strongly suggest that doula support is an essential component
of childbirth. A thorough reorganization of current birth practices
is in order to ensure that every woman has access to continuous
emotional and physical support during labor.
Continuous emotional support during labor in
a US hospital. A randomized controlled trial. Kennell
J, Klaus M, McGrath S, Robertson S, Hinkley C. JAMA 1991 May 1;265(17):2197-201
Department of Pediatrics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland,
OH.
The continuous presence of a supportive companion (doula) during
labor and delivery in two studies in Guatemala shortened labor
and reduced the need for cesarean section and other interventions.
In a US hospital with modern obstetric practices, 412 healthy
nulliparous women in labor were randomly assigned to a supported
group (n = 212) that received the continuous support of a doula
or an observed group (n = 200) that was monitored by an inconspicuous
observer. Two hundred four women were assigned to a control group
after delivery. Continuous labor support significantly
reduced the rate of cesarean section deliveries (supported
group, 8%; observed group, 13%; and control group, 18%) and forceps
deliveries. Epidural anesthesia for spontaneous vaginal deliveries
varied across the three groups (supported group, 7.8%; observed
group, 22.6%; and control group, 55.3%). Oxytocin use, duration
of labor, prolonged infant hospitalization, and maternal fever
followed a similar pattern. The beneficial effects
of labor support underscore the need for a review of current obstetric
practices.
The doula: an essential ingredient of childbirth
rediscovered. Klaus MH, Kennell JH. University
of California at San Francisco, USA. -Acta Paediatr 1997.
Eleven randomized control trials examined whether additional support
by a trained lay person (called a doula), student midwife or midwife,
who provides continuous support consisting of praise, encouragement,
reassurance, comfort measures, physical contact and explanations
about progress during labor, will affect obstetrical and neonatal
outcomes. The women were healthy primigravidas at term. Meta-analysis
of these studies showed a reduction in the duration of labor,
the use of medications for pain relief, operative vaginal delivery,
and in many studies a reduction in caesarian deliveries. At
6 weeks after delivery in one study a greater proportion of doula-supported
women were breastfeeding, reported greater self-esteem, less depression,
a higher regard for their babies and their ability to care for
them compared to the control mothers. Observations during labor
showed that fathers remained farther away from mothers than doulas,
talked and touched less. When the doula was present with
the couple during labor the father offered more personal support.
The father-to-be' s presence during labor and delivery is important
to the mother and father, but it is the presence of the doula
that results in significant benefits in outcome.
Benefits of massage therapy and use of a doula
during labor and childbirth. Keenan P.
Altern Ther Health Med 2000 Jan;6(1):66-74 Potomac Massage Training
Institute, USA.
This article reviews the most recent literature on touch support
and one-to-one support during labor and childbirth. The positive
and negative aspects of the traditional birth attendant are presented.
Research in one-to-one care and touch support during labor is
examined with respect to husband/partner, nurses, nurse-midwives,
and doulas (trained labor attendants). According to recent studies,
women supported by doulas or midwives benefit
by experiencing shorter labors and lower rates of epidural anesthesia
and cesarean section deliveries. Also, a smaller percentage
of their newborns experience fetal distress and/or are admitted
to neonatal intensive care units. Women whose husbands or partners
massage them during labor experience shorter labors. Nursing one-to-one
support results in no significant obstetric outcomes. Antenatal
perineal massage was found to reduce the rates of tears, cesarean
section, and instrumental deliveries. Research in perineal massage
during labor has shown no benefit.
Effects of psychosocial support during labour
and childbirth on breastfeeding, medical interventions, and mothers'
wellbeing in a Mexican public hospital: a randomised clinical
trial. Langer A, Campero L, Garcia C,
Reynoso S. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1998 Oct;105(10):1056-63 The Population
Council, Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean,
Colonia Coyoacan, Mexico DF, Mexico.
OBJECT: To evaluate the effects of psychosocial support during
labour, delivery and the immediate postpartum period provided
by a female companion (doula). DESIGN: The effects of the intervention
were assessed by means of a randomised clinical trial. Social
support by a doula was provided to women in the intervention group,
while women in the control arm received routine care. SETTING:
A large social security hospital in Mexico City. PARTICIPANTS:
Seven hundred and twenty-four women with a single fetus, no previous
vaginal delivery, < 6 cm of cervical dilatation, and no indications
for an elective caesarean section were randomly assigned to be
accompanied by a doula, or to receive routine care. OUTCOME MEASURES:
Breastfeeding practices, duration of labour, medical interventions,
mother's emotional conditions, and newborn's health. METHODS:
Blinded interviewers obtained data from the clinical records,
during encounters with women in the immediate postpartum period,
and at their homes 40 days after birth. Relative risks and confidence
intervals were estimated for all relevant outcomes. RESULTS: The
frequency of exclusive breastfeeding one month after birth was
significantly higher in the intervention group (RR 1.64; I-C:
1.01-2.64), as were the behaviours that promote breastfeeding.
However, the programme did not achieve a significant effect on
full breastfeeding. More women in the intervention
group perceived a high degree of control over the delivery experience,
and the duration of labour was shorter than in the control group
(4.56 hours vs 5.58 hours; RR 1.07 CI (95%) = 1.52 to -0.51).
There were no effects either on medical interventions, mothers'
anxiety, self-esteem, perception of pain and satisfaction, or
in newborns' conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Psychosocial
support by doulas had a positive effect on breastfeeding and duration
of labour. It had a more limited impact on medical interventions,
perhaps because of the strict routine in hospital procedures,
the cultural background of the women, the short duration of the
intervention, and the profile of the doulas. It is important to
include psychosocial support as a component of breastfeeding promotion
strategies.
A birth intervention: The therapeutic effects
of Doula support versus Lamaze preparation on first-time mothers'
working models of caregiving. G. Manning-Orenstein
Altern Ther Health Med 1998 Jul;4(4):73-81
CONTEXT: A working model of caregiving has been defined as an
internalized schema of caregiving that guides a mother's behavior
with her infant. This schema is strongly influenced by the mother's
first attachment relationship with her own mother, which frequently
operates outside her conscious awareness. OBJECTIVE: To examine
doula support at birth as an intervention that might correct distortions
of a mother's unconscious schema of caregiving, promoting more
secure caregiving following childbirth. DESIGN: The effects of
doula support versus Lamaze birth preparation on the working models
of caregiving of 35 first-time pregnant mothers were compared.
INTERVENTIONS: An interview was used to assess the mothers' working
models in the third trimester of pregnancy and again 4 months
after the mothers gave birth. Mood state and self-esteem were
measured at these times. A post hoc analysis was performed on
the mothers' birth experiences, the quality of their postpartum
support, and their evaluations of their infants' temperaments.
RESULTS: The prebirth to postbirth rating analysis
of the interviews revealed that the mothers in the doula group
were significantly less rejecting and helpless in their working
models of caregiving than were the mothers in the Lamaze
group. The mothers in the doula group also showed greater security
than did mothers in the Lamaze group, a difference that approached
but did not reach significance. In addition, the women in the
doula group were less emotionally distressed
and had higher self-esteem than did the women in the Lamaze
group, and the women in the doula group rated their infants as
significantly less fussy than the mothers in the Lamaze group
rated their infants. CONCLUSIONS: When viewed in the context of
working models of caregiving, mothers who used a doula were significantly
less rejecting and helpless, and approached significantly higher
scores on the secure scale, than did mothers who used Lamaze birth
preparation. Mothers rated as secure showed significantly
less mood disturbance and higher prebirth and postbirth self-esteem
than did mothers rated as insecure, providing construct validity
for the caregiving interviews.
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