Medical retrieval of pregnant women in labour: A scoping review

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Jessica McInnes , Bridget Honan , Richard Johnson , Cheryl Durup , Ajay Venkatesh , Fergus William Gardiner , Rebecca Schultz , Breeanna Spring
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Background

Remote Australian women in labour often rely on retrieval services to allow birthing in specialist obstetric centres. However, there is currently debate over when not to transfer a woman in labour, for risk of an in-transit birth, associated with worse neonatal outcomes.

Methods

A scoping review methodology was undertaken, to define the scope of published literature on the topic and identify gaps in the current knowledge.

Results

A total of seven full texts were deemed suitable for synthesis, which were all retrospective observational studies. Four themes from the studies’ findings were identified: population features, predicting time-to-birth, use of tocolysis and birth during medical evacuation.

Conclusion

The evidence identified in this review was of low methodological quality and heterogenous. The key findings were that births in-flight are rare, despite geographical distances and long transport times, with a knowledge gap on predictors of time-to-birth.

分娩中孕妇的医学检索:范围综述
背景偏远的澳大利亚分娩妇女通常依靠取回服务在专业产科中心分娩。然而,目前存在着关于何时不转移分娩中的妇女的争论,因为在途中分娩的风险与更糟糕的新生儿结局有关。方法采用范围界定审查方法,以确定已发表的有关该主题的文献的范围,并确定当前知识的差距。结果共有7篇全文被认为适合综合,均为回顾性观察研究。研究结果中确定了四个主题:人口特征、预测出生时间、使用分娩方法和医疗后送期间的分娩。结论本综述中确定的证据方法学质量低且异质性强。关键发现是,尽管地理距离遥远,运输时间长,但在飞行中分娩的情况很少见,而且在预测出生时间方面存在知识差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Australasian Emergency Care
Australasian Emergency Care Nursing-Emergency Nursing
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.60%
发文量
82
审稿时长
37 days
期刊介绍: Australasian Emergency Care is an international peer-reviewed journal dedicated to supporting emergency nurses, physicians, paramedics and other professionals in advancing the science and practice of emergency care, wherever it is delivered. As the official journal of the College of Emergency Nursing Australasia (CENA), Australasian Emergency Care is a conduit for clinical, applied, and theoretical research and knowledge that advances the science and practice of emergency care in original, innovative and challenging ways. The journal serves as a leading voice for the emergency care community, reflecting its inter-professional diversity, and the importance of collaboration and shared decision-making to achieve quality patient outcomes. It is strongly focussed on advancing the patient experience and quality of care across the emergency care continuum, spanning the pre-hospital, hospital and post-hospital settings within Australasia and beyond.
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