Abstract
The amount of pain that had been experienced by 1000 women during vaginal delivery of a live child was determined by interview within 48 hours of delivery. Patients had been offered a choice of analgesia, and 536 had received epidural analgesia: pain relief was greatest in this group, just over half having had a painless labour. The duration of pain was also reduced by a third in this group even though patients who had received an epidural block had tended to have longer labour and an incidence of assisted delivery of 51% compared with 6% in the remainder. Seventy-two per cent of the patients receiving an epidural had had as much pain as they had expected. A similar proportion (70%) was reported with simpler analgesic methods, suggesting that women may expect a certain amount of pain in labour and request further analgesic treatment when this is exceeded.
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CITATION STYLE
Morgan, B., Bulpitt, C. J., Clifton, P., & Lewis, P. J. (1982). Effectiveness of pain relief in labour: Survey of 1000 mothers. British Medical Journal, 285(6343), 689–690. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.285.6343.689
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