Comparative Evaluation of Epidural vs. Non-Pharmacological Pain Relief Techniques in Spontaneous Vaginal Delivery
Kazi Foyeza Akther (),
Snigdha Islam (),
Dr. Md Hosne Mobarak (),
Zahidul Mostafa (),
Banasree Roy Urmi (),
Tamanna Akter () and
Kaniz Fatematuz Zahura ()
Journal of Artificial Intelligence General science (JAIGS) ISSN:3006-4023, 2024, vol. 2, issue 1, 396-424
Abstract:
One of the most severe and complicated types of physiological pain is labour pain, and one must be able to use interventions that promote comfort and maternal and fetal safety. It is a comparative analysis of epidural analgesia versus non-pharmacological pain management in spontaneous vaginal births, which discusses their efficacy, maternal satisfaction, safety, and the implications of the study on the care of the obstetric process at large. The most popular pharmacological intervention type is epidural analgesia, which is able to better manage pain by inhibiting the transmission of nociceptive input through local anesthetic medication placed in the epidural space (Halliday et al., 2022). Nonetheless, it has some adverse effects, including long second-stage labour, hypotension, or even postpartum back pain (Malevic et al., 2019; Cahill et al., 2018). Non-pharmacological methods, in turn, including Lamaze breathing, massage, hydrotherapy, acupuncture, and relaxation techniques, increase maternal coping and maternal satisfaction and do not affect the progression of physiological labour (Kaple and Patil, 2023; Lai et al., 2021). Women are similarly empowered by using these techniques and also low-cost and culturally sensitive models of care (Heim et al., 2022; Zeleke et al., 2021). It indicates that although epidural analgesia is the most effective pain reliever, non-pharmacological pain relief has been shown to increase maternal satisfaction and reduce adverse effects as well as promote a better postpartum recovery (Argawu et al., 2023; Fumagalli et al., 2021). A specially designed, holistic, and personalized strategy involving the integration of pharmacologic accuracy and holistic, supportive care seems to be the best option in the current obstetric practice. It is concluded in the article that informed maternal choice, professional education, and accessibility of both pain management modalities play a major role in improving childbirth and clinical outcomes worldwide.
Keywords: Epidural analgesia; Non-pharmacological pain management; Spontaneous vaginal delivery; Maternal satisfaction; Labour pain relief techniques; Birth outcomes (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:das:njaigs:v:2:y:2024:i:1:p:396-424:id:435
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