| Literature DB >> 24373265 |
Mozhgan Firouzbakht1, Maryam Nikpour, Hajar Salmalian, Farideh Mohsenzadeh Ledari, Sorya Khafri.
Abstract
Lack of sufficient knowledge about the unknowns of pregnancy increases stress and requires more medical interventions. This study was conducted to assess the effects of prenatal education on mothers' stress and labor. This clinical trial was conducted to study 195 women (132 in the control group and 63 in the experimental group) who had attended healthcare centers in the city of Amol after their 16th gestational week. The experimental group participated in educational classes to learn how to experience a safe childbirth for 6-8 sessions of 1.5 hours almost every three weeks. The control group received only a routine care, pain assessment scales like Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) and McGill questionnaire, and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) were employed to collect data. The data were analyzed using SPSS software through t-test and Chi Square test to compare the groups. The results of the t-test showed a meaningful difference in levels of stress felt by the experimental group compared to control group (p=0.002). The Visual Analogue Scale suggested that in the transitional stages (8-10 cm cervical dilation), the level of pain felt by the experimental group was meaningfully lower than that felt by the control group (p=0.03). However, this was not significantly different between the two groups at 3-4 cm cervical dilation and the second stage of childbirth. The McGill scale's results for measuring pain levels, proved a meaningful difference between the experimental group and the control group (p=0.018).Educational and supportive interventions increased mothers' knowledge during pregnancy and reduced their fear of unknown environment and people. These trained women learned how to effectively overcome their problems and labor pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24373265 PMCID: PMC4825255 DOI: 10.5539/gjhs.v6n1p61
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob J Health Sci ISSN: 1916-9736
Figure 1Flow diagram of study
Demographic characteristics of study groups
| Demographic & obstetric characteristics | Classes education group | Control group | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean± SD) | 25.42±4.9 | 25.62±5.28 | 0.99 |
| Weight (Kg) | 68.2±11.8 | 67.8±13.4 | 0.88 |
| Length (M) | 1.62±0.14 | 1.59±0.17 | 0.56 |
| Mother Education | 0.003* | ||
| Primary | 15(24.2%) | 66(50.0%) | |
| High school | 28(45.2%) | 40(30.3%) | |
| University | 19(30.6%) | 26(19.7%) | |
| Father Education | 0.12 | ||
| Primary | 19(31.7%) | 71(53.8%) | |
| High school | 20(33.3%) | 35(26.5%) | |
| University | 21(35.5%) | 26(19.7%) | |
| Mother Occupation | 0.44 | ||
| Housewife | 52(83.9%) | 116(87.9%) | |
| At work | 10(16.1%) | 16(12.1%) | |
| Father Occupation | 0.08* | ||
| employer | 17(27.4%) | 18(13.6%) | |
| worker | 11(17.7%) | 30(22.7%) | |
| business | 34(54.8%) | 84(63.6%) | |
| living space | 0.06 | ||
| City | 36(63.2%) | 59(48.4%) | |
| Village | 56(90.3%) | 63(51.6%) | |
| Income level | 0.72 | ||
| Low | 6(9.7%) | 15(11.4%) | |
| Average | 56(90.3%) | 117(88.6%) | |
| Exercise | 0.004* | ||
| Yes | 26(41.9%) | 29(22%) | |
| No | 36(58.1%) | 103(78%) |
Comparisons Anxiety hospital and pain intensity with McGill pain scale in two studied groups
| Variable | Classes education group(mean± SD) | Control group(mean± SD) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anxiety hospital | 14.47±4.69 | 16.79±4.86 | *p=0.002 |
| Tiring | 2.45±0.64 | 2.46±0.62 | p=0.95 |
| Sickening | 2.16±0.73 | 2.22±0.66 | p=0.56 |
| Fearful | 2 ±0.75 | 2.35±0.73 | *p=0. 002 |
| Punishing | 1.75±0.76 | 2.12±0.84 | *p=0.001 |
| Total McGill | 8.3±2.35 | 9.16±2.14 | *p=0.018 |
Comparison of pain intensity with VAS pain scale in the different phases of labor in two studied groups
| Variable | Classes education group(mean± SD) | Control group(mean± SD) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pain Intensity in the 3-4(cm) Cervical Dilatation | 38.13±28.007 | 40.61±29.56 | p=0.58 |
| Pain Intensity in the 8-10(cm) Cervical Dilataion | 85.68±18.5 | 90.99±14.72 | *p=0.03 |
| Pain Intensity in the second phase labor | 86.08±18.37 | 90.44±16.64 | p=0. 19 |
The effect of mother education in pain and anxiety in two studied groups
| Mother Education | Pain intensity with VAS scale | Pain intensity with McGill scale | Anxiety | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control Group (mean±SD) | Classes Education (mean±SD) | Control Group (mean±SD) | Classes Education (mean±SD) | Control Group (mean±SD) | Classes Education (mean±SD) | |
| Primary | 9.46±16.8 | 79.23±22.15 | 9.37±2.01 | 0.5±2.44 | 16.69±5.09 | 15±5 |
| High School | 9.5±14.25 | 87.8±17.9 | 15±2.23 | 8.53±2.08 | 16.47±4.62 | 14.11±4.44 |
| University | 9.99±14.72 | 85.8±18.7 | 16±2.14 | 8.43±2.69 | 16.76±4.86 | 14.64±5.32 |
| P-value | P=0.85 | P=0.35 | P=0.052 | P=0.9 | P=0.67 | P=0.85 |