| Literature DB >> 28750676 |
Sara Kenyon1, Sophie Dann2, Lucy Hope3, Paula Clarke4, Amanda Hogan5, David Jenkinson6, Karla Hemming2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: National guidance recommends pregnant women are offered membrane sweeping at term to reduce induction of labour. Local audit suggested this was not being undertaken routinely across two maternity units in the West Midlands, UK between March and November 2012.Entities:
Keywords: Stepped wedge cluster randomised evaluation of training for community midwives
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28750676 PMCID: PMC5530942 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2106-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Recommendations regarding membrane sweeping from NICE Inducing Labour Guideline
| Membrane sweeping involves the examining finger passing through the cervix to rotate against the wall of the uterus, to separate the chorionic membrane from the decidua. If the cervix will not admit a finger, massaging around the cervix in the vaginal fornices may achieve a similar effect. For the purpose of this guideline, membrane sweeping is regarded as an adjunct to induction of labour rather than an actual method of induction. |
| The Bishop score is a group of measurements made by doing a vaginal examination and is based on the station, dilation, effacement (or length), position and consistency of the cervix. A score of 8 or more generally indicates that the cervix is ripe, or ‘favourable’ – when there is a high chance of spontaneous labour, or response to interventions made to induce labour. |
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Fig. 1Consort flow diagram
Participant baseline characteristics
| Baseline characteristics | Before training ( | After training ( |
|---|---|---|
| Women’s age (years) | ||
| Median (IQR) | 29 (25–32) | 29 (25–33) |
| < 20 | 78 (5.5%) | 81 (5.9%) |
| 20–35 | 1126 (79.3%) | 1074 (78.6%) |
| > 35 | 216 (15.2%) | 212 (15.5%) |
| Parity | ||
| Nulliparous | 850 (59.9%) | 793 (58.0%) |
| Multiparous | 569 (40.1%) | 574 (42.0%) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| Africa | 89 (6%) | 81 (6%) |
| Asia – South | 442 (31%) | 427 (31%) |
| Asia – Other | 16 (1%) | 19 (1%) |
| Caribbean | 60 (4%) | 57 (4%) |
| European – Britain | 642 (45%) | 619 (45%) |
| European – Other | 65 (5%) | 55 (4%) |
| Middle East | 43 (3%) | 47 (3%) |
| Other | 60 (4%) | 42 (3%) |
| Unknown | 3 (0%) | 20 (1%) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | ||
| ≤ 18 | 57 (4.0%) | 54 (4.0%) |
| 19–34 | 1254 (88.3%) | 1199 (87.7%) |
| ≥ 35 | 108 (7.6%) | 112 (8.2%) |
| Index of multiple deprivation from postcode | ||
| Quintile 1 | 911 (64.2%) | 855 (62.5%) |
| Quintile 2 | 244 (17.2%) | 253 (18.5%) |
| Quintile 3 | 191 (13.5%) | 158 (11.6%) |
| Quintile 4 | 52 (3.7%) | 67 (4.9%) |
| Quintile 5 | 20 (1.4%) | 32 (2.3%) |
| Trust | ||
| BWNFT | 926 (65%) | 871 (64%) |
| BHH | 494 (35%) | 496 (36%) |
Note we exclude those ineligible for sweeping and those delivering within the training transition period. Percentages are of the total and include any women with missing data on that variable
IQR interquartile range
Primary and secondary outcomes, sub-group by trust and process outcomes
| Before training (n =1417) | After training (n = 1356) | RR (95% CI) |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcomes | ||||
| Women offered and accepting membrane sweepinga | 629 (44.4%) | 634 (46.8%) | 0.90 (0.71–1.13) | 0.37 |
| Mean average (SD) number of membrane sweeps per woman | 0.603 (0.795) | 0.627 (0.787) | Rate ratio: 0.83 (0.67–1.01) | 0.068 |
| Secondary outcomes | ||||
| Onset of labourb | ||||
| Induced | 323 (22.8%) | 328 (24.2%) | 1.04 (0.80–1.34) | 0.77 |
| Mode of birthc | ||||
| Instrumental | 235 (16.6%) | 233 (17.2%) | 1.06 (0.75–1.48) | 0.75 |
| Emergency CS | 187 (13.2%) | 177 (13.1%) | 0.89 (0.63–1.26) | 0.52 |
| Sub-group by Trust | ||||
| BWNFT – Adherence to Trust guidance | ||||
| All women swept at 40 weeks (39 + 4 – 40 + 3) | 245/921 (26.6%) | 253/868 (29.1%) | 0.91 (0.64–1.29) | 0.596 |
| All eligible women swept for a second time at 41 weeksd (40 + 4 – 41 + 3) | 78/504 (15.5%) | 62/509 (12.2%) | 0.75 (0.41–1.36) | 0.339 |
| BHH – Adherence to Trust (NICE) guidance | ||||
| Nulliparous women swept at 40 weeks (39 + 4 – 40 + 3) | 47/174 (27.0%) | 59/173 (34.1%) | 1.81 (0.84–3.92) | 0.131 |
| All eligible nulliparous women swept for second time at 41 weeksc (40 + 4 – 41 + 3) | 10/80 (12.5%) | 17/88 (19.3%) | 2.28 (0.59–8.87) | 0.232 |
| Multiparous women swept at 41 weeks (40 + 4 – 41 + 3) | 38/152 (25.0%) | 46/160 (28.8%) | 0.78 (0.32–1.88) | 0.574 |
| Process outcomes | ||||
| Sweeps offered but declined | 80 (5.6%) | 97 (7.2%) | ||
| No record of sweeping | 708 (50.0%) | 625 (46.1%) | ||
| Reason if abandoned | ||||
| Os closed | 30 (4.8%) | 28 (4.4%) | ||
| Unable to reach | 38 (6.0%) | 20 (3.2%) | ||
| Unable to sweep | 50 (7.9%) | 42 (6.6%) | ||
| Other | 13 (2.1%) | 9 (1.4%) | ||
| Location of sweep | ||||
| Community | 400 (63.6%) | 431 (68.0%) | ||
| Hospital | 227 (36.1%) | 195 (30.8%) | ||
RRs are estimated using a generalised linear mixed model and are adjusted for clustering and underlying temporal trends
aThe estimated ICC (95% CI) was 0.060 (0.000–0.118) estimated using a one-way analysis of variance on the proportions scale
bFor onset of labour, the risk of being induced compared to spontaneous and not labouring combined was compared before and after training
cFor mode of birth, the risk of instrumental birth compared to SVB and CS combined was compared before and after training. Separately, emergency CS was compared to SVB, instrumental and elective CS combined, before and after training
dEligible women: pregnant at 41 + 3 weeks
Overall evaluation of training