Relationship between the Duration of the Second Stage of Labour and Neonatal Morbidity
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Abstract
(1) Background: To assess the relationship between the duration of the second stage of
labour and the neonatal morbidity risk; (2) Methods: An observational, analytical, retrospective cohort
study was performed at the “Mancha-Centro” Hospital (Spain) during the 2013–2016 period.
Data were collected from 3863 women who gave a vaginal birth. The studied neonatal morbidity
variables were umbilical cord arterial pH, 5-min Apgar score, need for advanced neonatal
resuscitation, and a composite neonatal morbidity variable on which the multivariate analysis
was done. A univariate analysis was used for the potential risk factors and a multivariate analysis
with binary logistic regression to control for possible confounding factors; (3) Results: The univariate
analysis showed a statistically significant relationship between the duration of the second stage
of labour and a high risk of advanced neonatal resuscitation and composite neonatal morbidity in
multiparous women. However, after performing the multivariate analysis for the variable “composite
neonatal morbidity”, we observed no relationship with the duration of the second stage of labour
in either nulliparous or multiparous women; (4) Conclusions: The duration of the second stage of
labour was not related to an increased risk of neonatal morbidity in our study population.
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Bibliographic citation
Infante Torres, N., Molina Alarcón, M., Gómez Salgado, J., Rodríguez Almagro, J., Rubio Álvarez, A., Hernández Martínez, A. (2019). Relationship between the Duration of the Second Stage of Labour and Neonatal Morbidity. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 8(3), 376. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm8030376














