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Effectiveness of Virtual Nature-based Intervention During First Stage of Labour

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Stress
Pain
Anxiety
Childbirth Experience
Fear of Childbirth
Interventions
Other: Virtual nature-based intervention
Registration Number
NCT05436015
Lead Sponsor
University of Oulu
Brief Summary

Rationale: The birth environment effects on childbirth experience and feelings of security of birthing women. Fear of Childbirth (FOB) is experienced by 6-10% of women in Finland and FOB predicts postpartum depression. Real or artificial views of nature have several positive health effects including reduction of anxiety and stress. Feasible and cost-effective nature-based intervention is being studied in this pilot RCT.

Objectives: To develop a virtual nature-based intervention for the delivery ward and to assess its feasibility and effectiveness. The study assesses how the nature-based intervention carried out during the first stage of labour affects the anxiety, fear, stress, pain and childbirth experience of birthing women. The aim is to provide evidence-based information on the feasibility and effectiveness of this intervention.

Methods: Sixty women will be randomized into two groups: Nature-based intervention group and control group. All participants will have assessments during first stage of labour in nature-based intervention group before and after intervention and in control group at the same time without intervention. In both groups also 2-6 hours after childbirth, 2 days after childbirth and 2 weeks after childbirth.

Detailed Description

During the piloting and feasibility assessment phase of intervention, the nature-based intervention is tested and its feasibility and preliminary effectiveness on the anxiety, fear, stress, pain and childbirth experience is assessed. Phase II consists of a pilot RCT (Randomized Control Trial) study and a qualitative interview study. The nature-based intervention includes videos filmed in the nature of Northern Finland and takes place during 1st stage of labour before the need for medical pain relief. The pilot phase test group (N=30) will receive a nature-based intervention in addition to standard care during childbirth and the control group (N=30) receives standard care treatment. The study includes parturients (weeks of pregnancy 37+0-41+6) entering delivery ward during active labour. Before childbirth the participants in the study are measured for anxiety, stress, fear of childbirth and pain, and feeling of safety. After childbirth, the childbirth experience is assessed in the deliveryward and before discharge in postnatal ward. Before discharge, postpartum experience with anxiety, fear of childbirth and depression is also measured. During the pilot phase at two weeks, childbirth experience, anxiety and depression are assessed. Data related to childbirth and mental health diagnoses is also collected. The data is analysed using statistical methods. In the pilot phase, the participants in the intervention group (N=5-10) will be interviewed two weeks after childbirth. Thematic interview about the experiences of nature-based interventions of midwives in the delivery room (N=5-10) will also take place. Interviews are recorded and the materials are analysed by inductive content analysis.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria

In order to be eligible to participate in this study, an individual must meet all of the following criteria:

  • full-term pregnancy (h 37+0 - 41+6)
  • childbirth at active first-stage of labour
Exclusion Criteria

An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:

  • severe vision or hearing loss
  • communication is possible only via interpreter
  • childbirth in second stage of labour
  • expected complications during childbirth

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention GroupVirtual nature-based interventionIn addition to usual standard care during childbirth in hospital, the intervention group will receive a virtual nature-based intervention
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Anxiety measured with STAI-Y1, change is being assessed1) Pre-intervention 2) Two days after childbirth 3) Two weeks after childbirth

The STAI meter is a two-part adult anxiety meter developed by Charles D. Spielberg and his research team (1983). It separates situation related anxiety (STATE-A = Y1) from character related tendency towards anxiety (TRAIT-A). In this study, the most used version of the STAI meter and only it's STATE-A section is utilized. Woman evaluates own current anxiety on a four-step scale with twenty questions. The respondents choose from the following options at each question: 1 = no anxiety at all, 2 = slight anxiety, 3 = some anxiety 4 = very much anxiety.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Stress with physiological measures: Baroreflex sensitivity, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Baroreflex sensitivity (BRS, ms/mmHg)

Stress with physiological measures: Blood pressure variation, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Blood pressure variation (BP variation, mmHg)

1) Fear 2) Pain and 3) Feeling of Security with VAS, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

VAS (Visual Analogy Scale). The VAS scale allows women to evaluate the intensity of three outcomes (three separate scales); 1) fear 2) pain and 3) feel of security on a 10cm long scale that starts at zero meaning 1) no pain 2) no fear 3) feeling of security at all and ends at 10 representing 1) the worst possible pain 2) the worst possible fear 3) the worst possible feeling of unsecurity.

Fear of Childbirth with W-DEQ version Fear of Childbirth W-DEQ version Fear of Childbirth with W-DEQ version BTwo days after childbirth

W-DEQ version B allows women to evaluate experiences around fear of childbirth after the birth. It is currently the most widely used to measure different aspects related to the fear of childbirth. It includes 33 Likert-scale questions (0-5).

Birth Experience with NRS, change is being assessed1) Two - six hours after childbirth 2) two days after childbirth

The NRS (Numeric rating scale) allows women to evaluate the birth experience from 1 to 10 immediately after birth and two days later. One means a very negative birth experience and 10 means a very positive birth experience.

Birth Experience with DSS, change is being assessed1) Two - six hours after childbirth 2) two days after childbirth 3) two weeks after childbirth

The DSS (Delivery Satisfaction Scale) allows women to evaluate the birth experience with 8 questions with a 1-5 scale, 1 meaning very much and 5 not at all

Maternal Depression with EPDS, change is being assessed1) two days after childbirth 2) two weeks after childbirth

EPDS (Edinburg Postnatal Depression Scale) allows women to estimate symptoms of post-natal depression. Each answer is given a score of 0 to 3 . The maximum score is 30.

Stress with physiological measures: Heart rate, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Heart rate (HR, beats per minute, BPM)

Stress with physiological measures: Respiration rate, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Respiration rate (RR, breaths per minute BPM)

Stress with physiological measures: Heart rate variability, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Heart rate variability (HRV, milliseconds, ms)

Stress with serum cortisol, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Serum cortisol (nmol/l)

Stress with physiological measures: Blood pressure, change is being assessedPre-intervention and immediately after the intervention

Blood pressure: systolic (SBP, mmHg) and diastolic (DBP, mmHg)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Oulu University Hospital

🇫🇮

Oulu, Finland

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