Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018

Background: The labour induction rate has been on the rise during the last decades, especially in industrialised countries. This trend is also occurring in Iceland, and the highest induction rate among the Nordic countries has been measured to be in Iceland. Limited research can be found on the effe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Margrét Þóra Einarsdóttir 1992-
Other Authors: Háskóli Íslands
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/38721
id ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/38721
record_format openpolar
spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/38721 2023-05-15T16:45:39+02:00 Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018 Framköllun fæðinga og þörf á eftirliti nýbura eftir fæðingu á Íslandi 2009-2018 Margrét Þóra Einarsdóttir 1992- Háskóli Íslands 2021-05 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/38721 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/38721 Lýðheilsuvísindi Thesis Master's 2021 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:53:37Z Background: The labour induction rate has been on the rise during the last decades, especially in industrialised countries. This trend is also occurring in Iceland, and the highest induction rate among the Nordic countries has been measured to be in Iceland. Limited research can be found on the effect of labour induction duration on infants. Elective labour induction is being performed more frequently but studies have found conflicting results on how this affects infants’ risk for needing monitoring after birth. Based on the high labour induction rate, it is important to gain as much information as possible about the effects of labour induction on infants born in Iceland. Objectives: To study the rate of the need for infant monitoring based on labour onset and based on labour induction duration. Indications for labour induction will also be examined with regards to infant monitoring. Methods: Data was obtained from the Icelandic Medical Birth Registry, containing information on all births in Iceland. Included in the analysis were live-born, term singletons born in Iceland 2009-2018. Frequencies and likelihoods were calculated, and chi-square tests used to compare labour onset groups and labour induction duration groups, this was also stratified by parity. Indications for indication were identified using ICD-10 codes, gestational age and maternal age. Results: The study population consisted of 38.443 infants. Among those, 7.593 (19,8%) were born after labour induction. There was a statistically significant difference in monitoring rates by labour onset type. The lowest NICU monitoring rate (4,6%) was amongst infants born after spontaneous labour, but the highest rate was among infants born after labour induction (7,3%). Primipara mothers had a higher labour induction rate (21,5%) than multipara mothers (18,6%). Infants born to primipara mothers did also have a higher NICU monitoring rate than infants born to multipara mothers (9,9% vs. 5,4%). Monitoring rates were also significantly different between groups of ... Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Lýðheilsuvísindi
spellingShingle Lýðheilsuvísindi
Margrét Þóra Einarsdóttir 1992-
Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018
topic_facet Lýðheilsuvísindi
description Background: The labour induction rate has been on the rise during the last decades, especially in industrialised countries. This trend is also occurring in Iceland, and the highest induction rate among the Nordic countries has been measured to be in Iceland. Limited research can be found on the effect of labour induction duration on infants. Elective labour induction is being performed more frequently but studies have found conflicting results on how this affects infants’ risk for needing monitoring after birth. Based on the high labour induction rate, it is important to gain as much information as possible about the effects of labour induction on infants born in Iceland. Objectives: To study the rate of the need for infant monitoring based on labour onset and based on labour induction duration. Indications for labour induction will also be examined with regards to infant monitoring. Methods: Data was obtained from the Icelandic Medical Birth Registry, containing information on all births in Iceland. Included in the analysis were live-born, term singletons born in Iceland 2009-2018. Frequencies and likelihoods were calculated, and chi-square tests used to compare labour onset groups and labour induction duration groups, this was also stratified by parity. Indications for indication were identified using ICD-10 codes, gestational age and maternal age. Results: The study population consisted of 38.443 infants. Among those, 7.593 (19,8%) were born after labour induction. There was a statistically significant difference in monitoring rates by labour onset type. The lowest NICU monitoring rate (4,6%) was amongst infants born after spontaneous labour, but the highest rate was among infants born after labour induction (7,3%). Primipara mothers had a higher labour induction rate (21,5%) than multipara mothers (18,6%). Infants born to primipara mothers did also have a higher NICU monitoring rate than infants born to multipara mothers (9,9% vs. 5,4%). Monitoring rates were also significantly different between groups of ...
author2 Háskóli Íslands
format Thesis
author Margrét Þóra Einarsdóttir 1992-
author_facet Margrét Þóra Einarsdóttir 1992-
author_sort Margrét Þóra Einarsdóttir 1992-
title Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018
title_short Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018
title_full Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018
title_fullStr Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018
title_full_unstemmed Labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in Iceland 2009-2018
title_sort labour induction and the need for neonatal monitoring following birth in iceland 2009-2018
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/38721
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/38721
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