Browsing by Author "Ezeoke, G.G., Adesina, K.T., Olabinjo, A.O., Ogunlaja, O.O., Fawole, A.A. & Adeniran, A.S."
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Item Early versus late presentation in labour by parturient women at a tertiary facility in North Central Nigeria: A cross-sectional study.(The publication of Zambia Medical Association., 2021) Ezeoke, G.G., Adesina, K.T., Olabinjo, A.O., Ogunlaja, O.O., Fawole, A.A. & Adeniran, A.S.Background: Adequate intrapartum care is important in modulating pregnancy outcome through prevention, early recognition and appropriate treatment of intrapartum complications. Aim: To compare labour outcome following early to that of late presentation in labour. Method: A cross-sectional study at a tertiary hospital in North Central Nigeria. Participants were pregnant women who presented in labour categorized into early (cervical dilatation (=/> 5cm) or late (cervical dilatation 9cm or 10cm) at the study site with singleton live foetus at =/>28 weeks gestation. deliveries before arrival at the delivery room were excluded from the study. Data was obtained from the hospital delivery records while data management was performed with SPSS version 21.0; p-value <0.05 was significant. Results: Out of 8,645deliveries,5,809(67.2%) presented early while 2,836(32.8%) presented late in labour. Late presentation was higher among booked women (1716 vs.1120; p<0.001) as well as prior treatment and presentation after onset of complications (1964 vs.872; p<0.001). Labour interventions including auguementation of labour(2718 vs.316; p<0.001), episiotomy 2319 vs. 949; p<0.001),assisted breech delivery, ventouse, forceps, and caesarean deliveries were higher for early while obstructed labour (95 vs 238) was higher forlate presentation. The perinatal mortality was 78/1,000 and 192/1,000 live births for early and late presentations in labour. Conclusion: Late presentation in labour is associated with hiher perinatal mortality; antenatal clinic health education should re-emphasize early presentation in labour while admissions into health institutions should be regulated based on available man power and facilities for patient management. ,