: The goal of induced or spontaneous labor is childbirth by vaginal delivery. Delivery after 37 weeks is desirable and associated with favorable maternal and newborn outcomes. Delivery facilities should have suitable staff and resources on site for antenatal services and delivery care. FIGO's Prep-for-Labor triage method provides rapid diagnostic tools that help define patients as high or low risk to determine whether transfer to a higher-level center is needed. There is often a disconnect between a facility's designation and its ability to achieve safe deliveries. For preplanned labor induction, the designated clinical facility must have the right set-up and prenatal records available to achieve a successful outcome. However, this is often not the case if a patient arrives in labor or needs an induction and the facility has limited patient information and resources, thus requiring rapid management decisions. The practical guidance checklist in this article defines maternal and/or fetal risk factors and delineates approaches and safe practices for labor induction and management, including when antenatal information is limited to maximize safe delivery practices. Guidelines on using the Bishop score (>6 or <6) to manage labor are presented. Evidence supporting successful safe labor induction at 41-42 weeks of gestation in low-risk cases is described. This practice will increase the rate of spontaneous labor and delivery, minimizing intervention and thereby diverting limited clinical resources to those patients in need. In the right setting, this could lead to around 80% of women delivering spontaneously, which remains a desired goal.

FIGO good practice recommendations for induced or spontaneous labor at term: Prep-for-Labor triage to minimize risks and maximize favorable outcomes

Inversetti, Annalisa;Di Simone, Nicoletta;
2023-01-01

Abstract

: The goal of induced or spontaneous labor is childbirth by vaginal delivery. Delivery after 37 weeks is desirable and associated with favorable maternal and newborn outcomes. Delivery facilities should have suitable staff and resources on site for antenatal services and delivery care. FIGO's Prep-for-Labor triage method provides rapid diagnostic tools that help define patients as high or low risk to determine whether transfer to a higher-level center is needed. There is often a disconnect between a facility's designation and its ability to achieve safe deliveries. For preplanned labor induction, the designated clinical facility must have the right set-up and prenatal records available to achieve a successful outcome. However, this is often not the case if a patient arrives in labor or needs an induction and the facility has limited patient information and resources, thus requiring rapid management decisions. The practical guidance checklist in this article defines maternal and/or fetal risk factors and delineates approaches and safe practices for labor induction and management, including when antenatal information is limited to maximize safe delivery practices. Guidelines on using the Bishop score (>6 or <6) to manage labor are presented. Evidence supporting successful safe labor induction at 41-42 weeks of gestation in low-risk cases is described. This practice will increase the rate of spontaneous labor and delivery, minimizing intervention and thereby diverting limited clinical resources to those patients in need. In the right setting, this could lead to around 80% of women delivering spontaneously, which remains a desired goal.
2023
indications
induced labor
site suitability
spontaneous labor
triage
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11699/78984
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