Research Grant
[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/253635]
Researchers:
A/Pr Christine Roberts
(Principal investigator)
,
A/Pr Camille Raynes-Greenow
,
Brian Peat
,
Prof David Henderson-Smart
,
Prof Kirsten Mccaffery
View all 6 related researchers
Brief description Many studies have shown that women want to participate in clinical decisions about the treatments they receive during pregnancy and that involvement in decision making increases satisfaction with maternity care. Decision aids are interventions to help people make specific and deliberative decisions by providing information on the options and outcomes relevant to the person's health. This project aims to develop and evaluate the world's first decision aid for women regarding the management of pain in labour and childbirth. A decision aid for managing the pain of childbirth is both practical and timely because there is a strong evidence base on labour analgesia but a lack of evidence-based information for women. For example, brochures on epidural analgesia outline the advantages of epidurals such as complete amelioration of pain, but do not present any information on adverse obstetric outcomes such as the doubling of risk for an instrumental birth. Most women are willing to experience pain in childbirth but do not want pain to overwhelm them. The decision aid will include a range of available drug and non-drug options for pain relief in labour and childbirth. Each of the options has benefits and risks, and the relative importance of these benefits and risks varies for individual women, a scenario where a decision aid produces the greatest benefit. The pain management decision aid developed in this project will be based on the best most recently available evidence and outcomes. It will incorporate a workbook, audiotape-CD and worksheet that will guide (but not direct) women with their pain management options that best suit them, taking ~30 minutes to complete. The decision aid will be evaluated to assess the impact on women's satisfaction with decision making, knowledge, anxiety and pregnancy outcomes. If successful, the results could be applied to improve consumer information and participation in clinical decisions across a wide spectrum of pregnancy care issues.
Funding Amount $AUD 267,375.00
Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants
Notes Standard Project Grant
- nhmrc : 253635
- PURL : https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/253635