http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2012/04/03/childbirth-takes-longer-now-than-50-years-ago/

Childbirth takes longer now than 50 years ago


Many tasks can be tackled more quickly now than 50 years ago, but delivering a 
baby naturally it seems is not one of them, according to a US government study. 
Compared with the 1960s, US women have in recent years spent two to three hours 
longer in labor, according to researchers at the US National Institutes of 
Health, who said the findings suggest doctors may need to rethink the 
definition of “normal” labor. The extra time is spent in the first stage of 
labor – the longest part of the process, before the “pushing” stage, according 
to findings published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

Mothers are different as well. On average, they’re older and weigh more, and 
their newborns are bigger too. “But even when we take these changing 
demographics into account, labor is still longer,” said lead researcher 
Katherine Laughon, at the National Institute of Child Health and Human 
Development. Though Laughon said the study wasn’t able to fully address the 
potential reasons for the difference, one partial explanation may be epidural 
pain relief, which is far more common now than 50 years ago. Epidurals are 
known to slow labor down by about 40 to 90 minutes. The findings were based on 
two government studies done decades apart.

One, between 1959 and 1966, included about 39,500 women who delivered a 
full-term baby, while the other tracked more than 98,000 women who had a 
full-term baby between 2002 and 2008.  All of the women had a spontaneous labor 
– that is, not induced. When it came to length of labor, first-time mothers in 
recent years typically spent 2.6 hours longer in the first stage, compared with 
their counterparts in the 1960s. The difference dropped to two hours with women 
who had given birth before.

Contemporary women were far more likely to have an epidural 55 percent, 
compared to just four percent of counterparts 50 years ago. Twelve percent had 
a C-section compared with three percent in the 1960s, while 31 percent were 
given oxytocin, which stimulates contractions, against 12 percent 50 years ago. 
Laughon noted that many more women now have labor inductions or planned 
cesarean sections versus decades ago, so women who actually go into spontaneous 
labor these days may differ somehow from their counterparts of 50 years ago. 
But whatever the underlying reasons, doctors may need to redefine “normal” 
labor, a concept that’s based on what was the norm for women a half-century ago.

For example, doctors have considered labor to be abnormal if there’s no change 
in the cervix after two hours in the “active” part of the first stage of labor. 
At that point, they may intervene by either giving ocytocin or doing a 
C-section. Laughon said the bottom line is that there may be a new “normal,” 
adding: “I think we need to revisit the definitions of ‘abnormal’ labor, and 
the timing of the interventions we use.” – Reuters

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