Big can be Beautiful and Normal Plus plus size Pregnancy Are we - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Big can be Beautiful and Normal Plus plus size Pregnancy Are we - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Big can be Beautiful and Normal Plus plus size Pregnancy Are we serving women well? Maggie Davies Consultant Midwife Too hot to handle Pregnant for the first time why shouldnt they be excited? What information will the women find on the


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Big can be Beautiful and Normal Plus plus size Pregnancy Are we serving women well? Maggie Davies Consultant Midwife

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Too hot to handle

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Pregnant for the first time why shouldn’t they be excited?

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What information will the women find on the internet? They google everything

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They meet their midwife, weighed and measured, Body mass index

  • calculated. From

then onwards every body starts to talk them about their BMI

OMG my BMI

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They then google increased BMI in

pregnancy and what do they find line?

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CHOICES, Your health, your choices

  • Miscarriage – one in four 25%
  • Gestational Diabetes – three times more likely
  • High blood pressure and pre-eclampsia twice as likely
  • Blood clots – higher risk when pregnant BMI above

30 additional risk

  • The baby’s shoulder becoming stuck during labour
  • Heavier bleeding than normal after birth
  • Having a baby more than 4kg, 7% risk for a woman

who’s BMI is 20 to 30 – doubled to 14% if BMI is over 30

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Royal College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists ‘Why you weight matters during pregnancy and after birth’

  • Thrombosis
  • Gestational diabetes – BMI 30 three times more likely
  • High Blood pressure & pre eclampsia – doubled with a BMI of

above 35 Risks for your baby

  • Neural tube defect
  • Miscarriage
  • Baby weighing more than 4kilos
  • Stillbirth
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Risks during labour and Birth? BMI of above 40

  • Baby born before 37 weeks
  • Long labour
  • Baby’s shoulder become ‘stuck’ during birth
  • An emergency Caesarean section
  • More difficult operation, higher risk of complications
  • Wound infection
  • Complications with general anaesthesia
  • Heavy bleeding at time of the Caesarean section or

after the birth

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So what are these messages saying to women Hardly

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Do plus size women have the same human rights as others ?

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Or they have no choices when labour begins

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Not allowed to mobilise Can’t go in the ‘pool’

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We come in all shape and sizes including plus size women

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Are all obese pregnant women ‘grouped’ together, Is this right? Overweight teenager Older overweight woman having her first baby

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What about women who have had previous normal births? The impact of maternal obesity on intrapartum outcomes in

  • therwise low risk women: secondary analysis of the

Birthplace national prospective cohort study (Hollowell et al 2013)

  • Nulliparous low risk women of normal weight had

higher absolute risks and were more likely to require

  • bstetric intervention or care than otherwise healthy

multiparous women with BMI>35kg/m2

  • Otherwise healthy multiparous obese women may have

lower intrapartum risks than previously appreciated

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Obesity and Normal birth: A qualitative study of clinician’s management of obese pregnant women during labour (Angela Kerrigan, Carol Kingdon and Helen Cheyne 2015) Background

  • One fifth of women in the UK are obese
  • Increased risk of experiencing complications of

labour and serious morbidity

  • They are more likely to have interventions such as
  • 1. IOL
  • 2. Caesarean section
  • 3. Wound infection
  • 4. DVT
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Obesity and Normal birth (Kerrigan et al 2015)

  • Reducing unnecessary interventions
  • Increasing normal birth rate
  • Improve their postnatal health and wellbeing
  • Reduce the burden on the NHS – care post
  • peratively
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Kerrigan et al(2015) cont. The aim of the study was to explore practitioners’ experiences of and strategies for providing intrapartum care for obese women. Three key themes emerged

  • Medicalisation of obese birth
  • Promotion of normal obese birth
  • Complexities and contradictions in staff attitudes and

behaviours

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Explore practitioner’s experiences of and strategies for providing intrapartum care to obese women Conclusion

  • Care is generally medicalised and focussed on the

associated risks

  • Conflicting views on care
  • Some practitioners do strive to promote normality
  • Challenge current practices – utilise some

‘interventions’ facilitate normality and mobility

  • Growing health problem
  • Positive proactive guidelines to maximise normal

birth if the postnatal health of obese women is to be improved

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Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board (ABMU) Just under 6,000 births per year Approximately 1200 women have BMI above 30kg/m2 - 900 with a BMI above 35kg/m2 Freestanding birth centre in Neath and Port Talbot hospital Just under 500 women commence labour in the birth centre every year

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Neath Port Talbot Birth Centre

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Antenatal surveillance Consultant Midwife – caring for women with medium risk complications

  • 15% of women have a BMI>35kg/m2
  • Many asking to give birth in the birth centre
  • Weight management plan for all women
  • Weighed again at 28 and 36 weeks
  • Discussion regarding how to minimise the risks
  • Encouraged to walk more
  • Glucose tolerance test at 28 weeks
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  • Gap and grow - serial growth scans
  • At 37 weeks a individual management plan is

developed

  • If spontaneous labour admitted to the birth centre
  • All Wales clinical pathway for normal labour
  • Intermittent auscultation
  • Use of water during labour and the birth
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So what has happened over the years?

  • Weight gain ranges from 0 kilos to maximum of 12

kilos.

  • Less than 1% have a impaired GTT
  • Between 25 to 40 obese women give birth in the

birth centre every year

  • Midwives are confident in caring for these women
  • Women mobilise and use water and give birth in

the pool

  • Women report a positive birth experience
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Success story

  • Over the past 12 years up to

400 women have commenced their labours or given birth in the birth centre

  • Approximately 120 having

their first babies

  • No shoulder dystocia
  • No PPH
  • 50% have laboured and/or

given birth in the pool

  • Some women have had

several babies either in the birth centre or at home

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Public Health Midwife 2016

  • A clinic for nulliparous women BMI 35 to

39.9kg/m2 with no other risk factors

  • Only recently being seeing parous women
  • 20 women seen, 75% normal birth, 25% LSCS
  • 20% gave birth in Freestanding birth centre
  • 80% Women who underwent a LSCS had a

PPH

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Comparing data with women who did not attend the clinic

  • Average weight gain in pregnancy was

7.9kilos as opposed to 8.5kilos

  • 75% achieved a normal birth compared to

52%

  • PPH rate was the same at 45% but the

majority of these were at LSCS

  • No women who gave birth in the Birth Centre

had a PPH

  • IOL was similar at 52 to 55%
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So are we serving the plus plus women well?

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To serve them well perhaps we do need to review the place of birth

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Birthplace study 2011 Giving birth is generally very safe Women who planned birth in a midwifery unit had significantly fewer interventions, including substantially fewer intrapartum Caesarean sections, and more ‘normal births’ than women who planned birth in an obstetric unit

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How I see the priorities

  • In Wales - increase out of OU births to 45% this group needs

to be considered

  • Working with the women and their families
  • Effective antenatal surveillance to minimise the risks
  • Effective preparation for birth, including information on the

internet

  • Strategies that will increase normal birth
  • 1. Place of birth
  • 2. Treating women as individuals – shared decision making
  • 3. Mobilisation
  • 4. Water
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Perhaps then we will be serving the plus plus women well and big can be beautiful and normal.

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maggie.e.davies@wales.nhs.uk 07970438663 Thank you