Objective: to measure the extent documented Swedish midwifery care for low risk labour and birth followed WHO's recommendations for care in normal birth and to compare midwifery care given to women who's labours could be classified as low and high risk.Study design: A retrospective examination of midwifery and medical records, 144 from women with low risk births and 54 from women with high risk births, for aspects of pregnancy, labour and birth using a validated instrument based on WHO's recommendations.Setting: Southern Sweden.Outcome measurements: Care given in accordance with WHO's four categories of practice and changes in risk group during the birth process. Documented care differed little between the labours of women at low risk and high risk. The midwives at the unit under study did not routinely carry out risk assessment.
Key conclusions and implications for practice:The mode of care was one of readiness for medical intervention. The act of carrying out risk assessments at the time of the woman's admission may affect awareness of the level of care offered to birthing women and thus help to reduce the number and variety of practices not recommended by WHO.
We have developed a multipurpose experimental control and data acquisition system designed for rapid prototyping of small educational experiments. The system has been designed with an emphasis on low cost, flexibility, and simplification of software and firmware design for minimal time to experiment. Software has been developed for both interactive and web-based control and readout interfaces. A standard Linux kernel and open-source development tools simplifies software development. A common VHDL framework containing a standard interface with the computer's external peripheral bus allows rapid firmware development.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.