Travel and Pregnancy/Breastfeeding |
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Clinical Trial: Home or Hospital Birth, Does It Really Matter? A Randomised Controlled Trial
This study is not yet open for patient recruitment.
Verified by University of Maastricht January 2005
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Purpose
In the Netherlands, which has about 200.000 births per year, maternity care is provided by midwives or general practitioners unless medical reasons necessitate specialist obstetric care. Women with low risk pregnancies are free to decide where to give birth, attended by their midwife or general practitioner, at home or in the hospital, from which they are then discharged within 24 hours. In the Netherlands these hospital births are referred to as “poliklinische bevallingen“ (i.e. outpatient deliveries) to indicate that they do not involve formal hospitalisation, or as “verplaatste thuisbevalling” (i.e. relocated home births) to indicate that they are supervised by the same caregivers as the home births without involvement of specialist obstetricians.
In the last two decades a marked increase in the referral rate to obstetricians during childbirth has occurred, especially for nulliparae, both in planned home births and planned hospital births (outpatient deliveries). 90% from all primigravidae will start their pregnancy under care of the primary caregiver (midwife of general practitioner). During the pregnancy 30% will be referred to the secondary caregiver (obstetrician specialist). The other 60% will start labor guided by the primary caregiver. More than 50% of these women will be referred to the obstetrician during labor.
Despite this unique situation of the Dutch maternity care, the differences between home and hospital birth (outpatient deliveries) with regard to effectivity and efficiency have never been investigated. It is also unclear if pregnant women are informed about a 50% risk of being transported to the secondary caregiver/ hospital during labor at home. Neitehr do we know what their experiences are.
This study aims to investigate the differences between home and hospital deliveries under care of the primary caregiver with regard to effectivity (costs) and efficiency (patient satisfaction) of care.
| Condition | Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| Pregnancy | Procedure: obstetric care | Phase III |
MedlinePlus consumer health information
Study Type: Observational
Study Design: Screening, Longitudinal, Random Sample, Prospective Study
Expected Total Enrollment: 1200
Study start: January 2006; Expected completion: December 2008
Last follow-up: December 2007; Data entry closure: December 2007
Eligibility
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Inclusion Criteria:
- Primiparae
- No medical indication for specialistic care
- The pregnant woman will be able to give birth at home or at a hospital
- The woman and her partner will be fluent in the Dutch language
Location and Contact Information
Marijke JC Hendrix, MBA 0031-46-4527228 mhendrix@wanadoo.nl
Netherlands, Limburg
Academic Hospital Maastricht, Maastricht, Limburg, 6136AB, Netherlands
Jan G. Nijhuis, Prof dr MD PhD, Study Chair, Academic Hospital Maastricht
Marijke JC Hendrix, MBA, Principal Investigator, Academic Hospital Maastricht
More Information
Last Updated: December 8, 2005
Record first received: October 7, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00237601
Health Authority: Netherlands: Medical Ethics Review Committee (METC)
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2006-01-10

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