This study was carried out to assess the awareness, perceptions, acceptance, and the level of utilization of epidural analgesia in relation to other methods of labor pain relief among prospective parturient attending the ante-natal clinic in south eastern Nigeria. Women attending the ante-natal clinic were interviewed using interviewer administered questionnaires containing both open and closed questions, to evaluate their awareness, perceptions, acceptance and level of utilization of labor analgesia in general and epidural analgesia in particular. Data were analysed using SPSS Statistics Version 21.0. The study included 150 women with mean age of 29.63±5.02. Most of the respondents (94.7%) had at least secondary school education. More than half the respondents (62.7%) knew about labor analgesia and 38.7% knew about epidural labor analgesia. Source of knowledge to vast majority (75.6%) were doctors and nurses. Majority of the multiparous respondents (81.27%) had moderate or severe pain in the previous confinement and only 53% had pain relieve. Of those who had pain relieve, two third hard breathing exercises while 4.8% had epidural analgesia. Majority of the respondents (72.7%) would want to have labor analgesia, and 53.3% desired epidural in their next delivery. There is poor level of awareness and utilization of epidural labor analgesia by women attending an antenatal clinic in south eastern Nigeria.
Published in | Clinical Medicine Research (Volume 6, Issue 3) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20 |
Page(s) | 116-120 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2017. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Epidural Analgesia, Labor Pain, Awareness and Perception
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APA Style
Fidelis Anayo Onyekwulu, Innocent Chidiebere Ugwu, Elias Chikee Aniwada, Tochukwu Christopher Okeke. (2017). Awareness and Perception of Epidural Labor Analgesia Amongst Parturient in South Eastern Nigeria. Clinical Medicine Research, 6(3), 116-120. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20
ACS Style
Fidelis Anayo Onyekwulu; Innocent Chidiebere Ugwu; Elias Chikee Aniwada; Tochukwu Christopher Okeke. Awareness and Perception of Epidural Labor Analgesia Amongst Parturient in South Eastern Nigeria. Clin. Med. Res. 2017, 6(3), 116-120. doi: 10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20
AMA Style
Fidelis Anayo Onyekwulu, Innocent Chidiebere Ugwu, Elias Chikee Aniwada, Tochukwu Christopher Okeke. Awareness and Perception of Epidural Labor Analgesia Amongst Parturient in South Eastern Nigeria. Clin Med Res. 2017;6(3):116-120. doi: 10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20
@article{10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20, author = {Fidelis Anayo Onyekwulu and Innocent Chidiebere Ugwu and Elias Chikee Aniwada and Tochukwu Christopher Okeke}, title = {Awareness and Perception of Epidural Labor Analgesia Amongst Parturient in South Eastern Nigeria}, journal = {Clinical Medicine Research}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {116-120}, doi = {10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.cmr.20170603.20}, abstract = {This study was carried out to assess the awareness, perceptions, acceptance, and the level of utilization of epidural analgesia in relation to other methods of labor pain relief among prospective parturient attending the ante-natal clinic in south eastern Nigeria. Women attending the ante-natal clinic were interviewed using interviewer administered questionnaires containing both open and closed questions, to evaluate their awareness, perceptions, acceptance and level of utilization of labor analgesia in general and epidural analgesia in particular. Data were analysed using SPSS Statistics Version 21.0. The study included 150 women with mean age of 29.63±5.02. Most of the respondents (94.7%) had at least secondary school education. More than half the respondents (62.7%) knew about labor analgesia and 38.7% knew about epidural labor analgesia. Source of knowledge to vast majority (75.6%) were doctors and nurses. Majority of the multiparous respondents (81.27%) had moderate or severe pain in the previous confinement and only 53% had pain relieve. Of those who had pain relieve, two third hard breathing exercises while 4.8% had epidural analgesia. Majority of the respondents (72.7%) would want to have labor analgesia, and 53.3% desired epidural in their next delivery. There is poor level of awareness and utilization of epidural labor analgesia by women attending an antenatal clinic in south eastern Nigeria.}, year = {2017} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Awareness and Perception of Epidural Labor Analgesia Amongst Parturient in South Eastern Nigeria AU - Fidelis Anayo Onyekwulu AU - Innocent Chidiebere Ugwu AU - Elias Chikee Aniwada AU - Tochukwu Christopher Okeke Y1 - 2017/05/25 PY - 2017 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20 DO - 10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20 T2 - Clinical Medicine Research JF - Clinical Medicine Research JO - Clinical Medicine Research SP - 116 EP - 120 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2326-9057 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cmr.20170603.20 AB - This study was carried out to assess the awareness, perceptions, acceptance, and the level of utilization of epidural analgesia in relation to other methods of labor pain relief among prospective parturient attending the ante-natal clinic in south eastern Nigeria. Women attending the ante-natal clinic were interviewed using interviewer administered questionnaires containing both open and closed questions, to evaluate their awareness, perceptions, acceptance and level of utilization of labor analgesia in general and epidural analgesia in particular. Data were analysed using SPSS Statistics Version 21.0. The study included 150 women with mean age of 29.63±5.02. Most of the respondents (94.7%) had at least secondary school education. More than half the respondents (62.7%) knew about labor analgesia and 38.7% knew about epidural labor analgesia. Source of knowledge to vast majority (75.6%) were doctors and nurses. Majority of the multiparous respondents (81.27%) had moderate or severe pain in the previous confinement and only 53% had pain relieve. Of those who had pain relieve, two third hard breathing exercises while 4.8% had epidural analgesia. Majority of the respondents (72.7%) would want to have labor analgesia, and 53.3% desired epidural in their next delivery. There is poor level of awareness and utilization of epidural labor analgesia by women attending an antenatal clinic in south eastern Nigeria. VL - 6 IS - 3 ER -