A Landmark in the History of Birthing Pools
by Michel Odent, MD
© 2000 Midwifery Today, Inc. All rights reserved.
[Editor's note: This article first appeared in Midwifery Today Issue 54, Summer 2000.]
August 21, 1999 should be remembered as a landmark in the history of
birthing pools. On that day the British Medical Journal published
an unprecedented study about "the perinatal mortality and morbidity
among babies delivered [sic] in water" (1).
This study is authoritative for several reasons:
- The conclusions are based on large numbers: the authors
traced the 4,032 babies born under water in England and Wales between
April 1994 and March 1996.
- The authors belong to a prestigious department of
epidemiology and public health (Institute of Child Health, London,
United Kingdom).
- The report has been published in a respected peer
review medical journal.
Methods
In order to convince anyone of the seriousness of this study, all midwives should
be aware of the sophisticated methods used by the London epidemiologists. Several
inquiries were combined in order to eliminate the effects of under-reporting.
From April 1994 to April 1996, all 1,500 consultant pediatricians in
the British Isles were surveyed each month by the "British Paediatric
Surveillance Unit" and asked to report whether or not they knew of
any births that met the case definition of "perinatal death or admission
for special care within 48 hours of birth following labour or delivery
in water." The findings were compared with reports to the confidential
inquiry into stillbirths and death in infancy (a mandatory notification
scheme). At the same time a postal questionnaire was sent to all National
Health Service (NHS) maternity units in England and Wales in 1995 and
again in 1996 to determine the total number of deliveries in water during
the study period.
Results
The main results can be easily summarized and remembered.
There were five perinatal deaths among 4,032 births in water; that is a rate of
1.2 per 1,000. In the context of the United Kingdom this rate is similar for low
risk deliveries that do not take place in water. Furthermore, none of these five
deaths were attributable to delivery in water: one stillbirth was diagnosed before
immersion; another stillbirth occurred after a concealed pregnancy and unattended
homebirth with no previous prenatal care; one baby died aged three days with neonatal
herpes infection; one died aged thirty minutes with an intracranial hemorrhage after
precipitate delivery; and another one, who died aged eight hours, was found to have
hypoplastic lungs at postmortem examination.
There were thirty-four babies admitted for special care; that
is a rate of 8.4 per 1,000. Rates of admission for special care of babies
born to low risk primiparous women are significantly higher than for babies
born in water. Birth in water may have caused water aspiration in two
babies.
Comments
Compared with well known anecdotes, such as one case of neonatal polycythemia
reported in The Lancet in 1997(2), this survey of more than 4,000 babies
born (rather than delivered!) in water has been paradoxically ignored
by the media, the medical circles and the natural childbirth movement
as well. However, it undoubtedly represents a landmark in the history
of the use of water during labour. From now on midwives should not be
the prisoners of strict protocols. Updated flexible guidelines should
accept that "in any hospital where a pool is in daily use a birth
under water is bound to happen now and then"(3). Midwives are far
less anxious and invasive wherever a birth under water is considered acceptable
if the woman does not have the time or is reluctant to get out of the
water during a powerful "fetus ejection reflex."
The first effect of this study should be to change the focus. An opportunity
is given to recall that the main reason for the birthing pools is to facilitate
the birth process and to reduce the need for drugs and other intervention.
In order to control the current epidemic of epidurals the point is to
divulge a small number of simple updated recommendations in order to make
the most effective use of birthing pools.
Updated recommendations
The main recommendations are based on the fact that immersion in
water at the temperature of the body tends to facilitate the birth process
during a limited length of time (in the region of an hour or two).
This simple fact is confirmed by clinical observation and by the results
of a Swedish randomised controlled study suggesting that women who enter
the bath at five centimetres or after ("late bath group") have
a short labour and a reduced need for oxytocin administration and epidural
analgesia (4). Physiologists can offer interpretations. The common response
to immersion is a redistribution of blood volume (more blood in the chest)
that stimulates the release by specialized heart cells of the atrial natriuretic
peptide (ANP). The inhibitory effect of ANP on the activity of the posterior
pituitary gland is slow, in the region of one to two hours (5). When a
woman is in labour this inhibitory effect is preceded by an analgesic
effect that is associated with lower levels of stress hormones and increased
release of oxytocin. Furthermore it is partly via a release of oxytocin
that the redistribution of blood volume stimulates the specialized heart
cells.
The first practical recommendation is to give great importance to
the time when the laboring woman enters the pool. Experienced midwives
have many tricks at their disposal to help women be patient enough so
that they can ideally wait until five centimetres dilation. A shower,
that more often as not implies complete privacy, is an example of what
the midwife can suggest while waiting. The BMJ survey clearly indicates
that many women stay too long in the bath (the average time was in the
region of three hours for women who gave birth in water!). One reason
is that many of them enter the bath long before five centimetres.
The second recommendation is to avoid planning a birth under water.
When a woman has planned a birth under water she may be the prisoner
of her project; she is tempted to stay in the bath while the contractions
are getting weaker, with the risk of long second and third stages. There
are no such risks when a birth under water follows a short series of irresistible
contractions.
The recommendations regarding the temperature should not be overlooked. It is
easy to check that the water temperature is never above 37° C (the temperature
of the maternal body). Two cases of neonatal deaths have been reported after immersion
during labor in prolonged hot baths (39.7° C in one case) (6). The proposed interpretation
was that the fetuses had reached high temperatures (the temperature of a fetus is
1° higher than the maternal temperature) and could not meet their increased needs
in oxygen. The fetus has a problem of heat elimination.
At the dawn of a new phase in the history of childbirth one can anticipate
that, if a small number of simple recommendations are taken into account,
the use of water during labor will seriously compete with epidural anesthesia.
Then helping women to be patient enough and enter the pool at the right
time will appear as a new aspect of the art of midwifery.
Michel Odent, MD founded the Primal Health Research Centre in London
and developed the maternity unit in Pithiviers, France, where birthing pools are used.
He is the author of ten books published in twenty languages. Two of them—Birth
Reborn and The Nature of Birth and Breastfeeding—were published
originally in the United States. His most recent book is The Farmer and the Obstetrician.
References
- Gilbert, R.E. & Tookey, P.A. (1999). British Medical Journal 319: 483-7.
- Austin, T., Bridges, N., et al. (1997). Severe neonatal polycythaemia after
third stage of labour under water. Lancet 50: 1445-47.
- Odent, M. (1983). Birth under water. Lancet, 1476-77.
- Eriksson, M., Mattsson, L.A., Ladfors, L. (1997). Early or late bath during
the first stage of labour: a randomised study of 200 women. Midwifery 13 (3): 146-48.
- Gutkowska, J., Antunes-Rodrigues, J., McCann, Sm. (1997). Atrial natriuretic
peptide in brain and pituitary gland. Physiological Reviews 77 (2): 465-515. C-2
Odent, M. (1983). Birth under water. Lancet 1476-77.
- Rosenear, S.K., Fox, R., Marlow, N., Stirrat, G.M. (1993). Birthing pools and
the fetus (letter). Lancet 342: 1048-9.
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