Add this result to my export selection A Meta-Analysis of The Effect On Maternal Health Of Upright Positions During The Second Stage Of Labour, Without Routine Epidural Analgesia Source: PubMed (Add filter) Published by Journal Of Advanced Nursing, 07 September 2017 effect on maternal health of upright positions during the second stage of labour. BACKGROUND: Maternal... Read Summary Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection How does an upright position compare with a recumbent position in the second stage of labor for women receiving epidural anesthesia? Source: Cochrane Clinical Answers (Add filter) 18 July 2019 Clinical Answers Question: How does an upright position compare with a recumbent position in the second stage... Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection How does any upright position compare with supine position for women in the second stage of labor without epidural anesthesia? Source: Cochrane Clinical Answers (Add filter) 20 September 2017 Clinical Answers Question: How does any upright position compare with supine position for women in the second... Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection Midwifery care in labour guidance for all women in all settings (PDF) Source: Royal College of Midwives - RCM (Add filter) Published by Royal College of Midwives, 01 November 2018 This document comprises a summary of the evidence and recommendations for the midwifery care of women in labour in all settings in the UK. It aims to provide an accessible version of... Read Summary Type: Guidance (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection Maternal positions and mobility during first stage labour Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (Add filter) 09 October 2013 both high‐ and low‐income countries giving birth in health facilities, to labour in bed. There is no evidence that this is associated... Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection Maternal position in the second stage of labour for women with epidural anaesthesia Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (Add filter) 09 November 2018 analgesia in labour prolongs the second stage and increases instrumental delivery. It has been suggested that a more... Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection NIHR Alert: Lying on one's side in labour with an epidural is safe and leads to more spontaneous births Source: NIHR Evidence (Add filter) 12 December 2017 Women who lie on their side in the second stage of labour after a low-dose epidural are more likely to give birth spontaneously than those who remain upright when actively contracting. Lying down on... Type: Evidence Summaries (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection Position in the second stage of labour for women without epidural anaesthesia Source: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (Add filter) 25 May 2017 being upright (sitting, birthing stools, chairs, squatting, kneeling) or lying down (lateral (Sim's) position,... Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection Effect of maternal birth positions on duration of second stage of labor: systematic review and meta-analysis. Source: PubMed (Add filter) Published by BMC pregnancy and childbirth, 04 December 2019 that giving birth in an upright position is beneficial for both mother and the infant for several physiologic reasons. An... Read Summary Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)
Add this result to my export selection A meta-analysis of upright positions in the second stage to reduce instrumental deliveries in women with epidural analgesia Source: Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects - DARE (Add filter) 31 January 2007 A meta-analysis of upright positions in the second stage to reduce instrumental deliveries in women with epidural... Type: Systematic Reviews (Add filter)