Department of OBGYN, The University of Kansas Health System, 3901 Rainbow Blvd, Kansas City, Kansas, 66160, USA.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2021 May 11;21(1):371. doi: 10.1186/s12884-021-03854-x.
Women's attitudes towards obstetric forceps likely contribute to declining use and opportunities for residency training, but formal documentation of women's attitudes towards obstetric forceps is currently limited. A clearer understanding should help guide our attempts to preserve its use in modern obstetrics and to improve residency training. Our objective is to document women's attitudes towards obstetric forceps and the influence basic demographic variables have on those attitudes.
A cross sectional study was performed. We developed a one-time anonymous structured 5-question survey that was given to all women with low-risk pregnancies presenting to our medical center for prenatal care between October 2018-December 2018. The questionnaire asked for the woman's self-reported age, race, education level and insurance type. The five questions were as follows: (1) Do you think forceps should be used to deliver babies, (2) Is forceps safe for the baby, (3) Is forceps safe for the mother, (4) Do you think forceps can help to lower the cesarean section rate, (5) Do you think physicians in training should learn to place forceps on a real patient. We calculated means and proportions for the responses according to the overall group and various subgroups. Statistical analysis included Kruskall-Wallis or Mann-Whitney tests as appropriate. Results were also adjusted by regression using a Generalized Linear Model. Power calculation showed sample size of 384 was required.
A total of 499 women returned the questionnaire. Response rate was 56.8% (499/878). The findings suggest that women's perceptions towards forceps are generally negative. Women with white ethnicity, college education or higher and private insurance did have more favorable views than their counterparts, but the majority still had unfavorable views. Age was not shown to have a significant effect on maternal attitude.
Women's views towards forceps use in the University of Kansas Medical Center are negative and may be contributing to the decline of its use. Improving women's perceptions of forceps would require multiple different strategies rather than a single focused easily-implemented message. If forceps training continues, such training will rely on a minority of women who will accept forceps use in childbirth.
女性对产钳的态度可能导致产钳使用减少和住院医师培训机会减少,但目前对女性产钳态度的正式记录有限。更清晰的认识应该有助于指导我们努力保留其在现代产科中的使用,并改善住院医师培训。我们的目标是记录女性对产钳的态度,以及基本人口统计学变量对这些态度的影响。
进行了一项横断面研究。我们开发了一个一次性匿名的结构化 5 个问题的调查,该调查于 2018 年 10 月至 12 月期间向在我们医疗中心接受产前保健的所有低危妊娠妇女发放。问卷询问了妇女的自我报告年龄、种族、教育水平和保险类型。这五个问题是:(1)你认为产钳应该用于分娩吗?(2)产钳对婴儿安全吗?(3)产钳对母亲安全吗?(4)你认为产钳可以帮助降低剖宫产率吗?(5)你认为住院医师应该学习在真实患者身上放置产钳吗?我们根据总体组和各种亚组计算了回答的平均值和比例。统计分析包括适当的 Kruskal-Wallis 或 Mann-Whitney 检验。结果还通过广义线性模型回归进行了调整。根据需要计算了 384 名样本量的功效。
共有 499 名妇女返回了问卷。回复率为 56.8%(499/878)。调查结果表明,女性对产钳的看法普遍负面。白人种族、大学学历或更高学历以及私人保险的女性比同龄人有更有利的看法,但大多数女性仍然持不利看法。年龄对产妇态度没有显著影响。
堪萨斯大学医学中心的女性对产钳使用的看法是负面的,这可能是产钳使用减少的原因。要改善女性对产钳的看法,需要采用多种不同的策略,而不是单一的、易于实施的信息。如果继续进行产钳培训,这种培训将依赖于少数愿意接受产钳分娩的女性。