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Emergency Caesarean Section: Influences on the Decision-to-Delivery Interval
Author(s) -
Aiste Cerbinskaite,
Sarah Malone,
Jennifer M. McDermott,
Andrew Loughney
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of pregnancy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.828
H-Index - 32
eISSN - 2090-2735
pISSN - 2090-2727
DOI - 10.1155/2011/640379
Subject(s) - medicine , staffing , caesarean section , obstetrics , confidence interval , prospective cohort study , pregnancy , nursing , surgery , genetics , biology
RCOG/NICE guidelines recommend that, for fetal compromise in labour, delivery should be accomplished ideally within 30 minutes. In this study, we investigated the factors which affect the decision-to-delivery (DD) intervals for emergency caesareans. To achieve this, prospective data were collected for all grade 1 and 2 caesareans performed on a busy labour ward over 12 months. We found that the ratio of labouring women to midwives had a significant effect on the DD intervals, which were significantly prolonged when 1 : 1 care was not provided ( P < 0.001). The observed effect resulted exclusively from a prolonged transfer time to theatre. General anesthesia use shortened the DD interval for grade 1 caesareans ( P < 0.001) and was more likely to be used during the day shift ( P < 0.009). We conclude that midwifery staffing levels and the form of anaesthesia employed influence on DD intervals for the most urgent caesarean sections.

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