Outcomes of care at "Føderiket- Midwifery-Unit" 2007-2011: a freestanding midwifery-led-unit in Oslo, Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12734Date
2015-08-28Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The aim of this study was to provide a description and evaluation of birth outcomes for women who started care at Føderiket
Midwifery Unit (FMU), a freestanding midwifery unit in Oslo. FMU opened in 2007 as a five-year project. It was closed in 2011
for economic reasons, and the planned evaluations were never performed. Data from 495 women who started care at FMU
were prospectively collected. Socio-demographic characteristics, transfers to hospital, maternal and neonatal outcomes were
described. The findings showed that 115 (23%) of the women were primiparous and 380 (77%) multiparous. A total of 408
women (82%) had no complications and no need for additional medical treatment during labour and birth. There were 73 (15%)
transfers before birth, and 14 (3%) after birth. Nine women (2%) were delivered by caesarean section and 19 (4%) by vacuum
extraction. Thirty women (6%) had postpartum haemorrhage >500 ml and five (1%) received blood transfusions. Five babies
(1%) were transferred to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, all were discharged to their homes within a week. There were no
cases of deaths, or serious morbidity. Our conclusions are that the results after four years management were comparable to
other freestanding midwifery-led units in Western countries.
Description
Accepted manuscript version. Published version available in Nordic journal of nursing research, 2015, 36(1), 38-43.