Labor and birth care by nurse with midwifery skills in Brazil
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Abstract
The participation of nurses and midwives in vaginal birth care is limited in Brazil, and there are no
national data regarding their involvement. The goal was to describe the participation of nurses and nurse-midwives
in childbirth care in Brazil in the years 2011 and 2012, and to analyze the association between hospitals with nurses
and nurse-midwives in labor and birth care and the use of good practices, and their influence in the reduction of
unnecessary interventions, including cesarean sections.
Methods: Birth in Brazil is a national, population-based study consisting of 23,894 postpartum women, carried
out in the period between February 2011 and October 2012, in 266 healthcare settings. The study included all
vaginal births involving physicians or nurses/nurse-midwives. A logistic regression model was used to examine the
association between the implementation of good practices and suitable interventions during labor and birth, and
whether care was a physician or a nurse/nurse-midwife led care. We developed another model to assess the
association between the use of obstetric interventions during labor and birth to the personnel responsible for the
care of the patient, comparing hospitals with decisions revolving exclusively around a physician to those that also
included nurses/nurse-midwives as responsible for vaginal births.
Results: 16.2 % of vaginal births were assisted by a nurse/nurse-midwife. Good practices were significantly more
frequent in those births assisted by nurses/nurse-midwives (ad lib. diet, mobility during labor, non-pharmacological
means of pain relief, and use of a partograph), while some interventions were less frequently used (anesthesia,
lithotomy position, uterine fundal pressure and episiotomy). In maternity wards that included a nurse/nurse-midwife
in labour and birth care, the incidence of cesarean section was lower.
Conclusions: The results of this study illustrate the potential benefit of collaborative work between physicians and
nurses/nurse-midwives in labor and birth care. The adoption of good practices in managing labor and birth could
be the first step toward more effective obstetric and midwifery care in Brazil. It may be easier to introduce new
approaches rather than to eliminate old ones, which may explain why the reduction of unnecessary interventions
during labor and birth was less pronounced than the adoption of new practices.