Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2757495 International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundObese parturients are recognised as high risk and an antenatal anaesthetic consultation is recommended. The potential positive and negative effects of this consultation have not been investigated. This prospective observational study aimed to determine if antenatal anaesthetic consultation affects decisional conflict, anxiety scores or risk perception in obese women planning vaginal delivery.MethodsEligible women had a body mass index of ⩾35 kg/m2, planning a vaginal delivery, aged ⩾18 years and able to complete a questionnaire presented in English. Before their anaesthetic consultation, women completed a written decisional conflict questionnaire, the Six-Point Short Form of the Speilberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory and two questions regarding risk perception. All questions were repeated by telephone consultation two weeks later. Independent samples t-tests were used to detect differences between pre and post-test scores.ResultsOf 114 women recruited, 89 completed the protocol and were analysed. Women had a mean ± SD age of 29.4 ± 5.2 years and body mass index of 43.6 ± 5.6 kg/m2. Decisional conflict scores were significantly lower after the consultation (30.04 vs. 16.54, P < 0.001). Anxiety scores were lower (9.41 vs. 8.49, P = 0.002) but this was not clinically significant. Only 19.1% of women felt their health was at risk in pregnancy; this did not change after the consultation. Thirteen women changed their preference toward epidural analgesia (P = 0.01).DiscussionOur results support the current practice of referral of obese parturients for anaesthetic consultation, but demonstrate that most women remain unaware of the risks of obesity in pregnancy despite anaesthetic consultation.

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