Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) causes important negative effects on quality of life. Endometriosis is the most common cause of CPP in females, and diagnostic delay is over six years internationally. Data remain scarce for CPP impact or diagnostic delay in Aotearoa New Zealand. This study used an online survey to explore the impact of CPP on various life domains for those aged over 18. Additionally, for those with an endometriosis diagnosis, diagnostic delay and factors affecting this over time were explored. There were 800 respondent (620 with self-reported endometriosis). CPP symptoms, irrespective of final diagnosis, started prior to age 20 and negatively impacted multiple life domains including employment, education, and relationships. Mean diagnostic delay for those with endometriosis was 8.7 years, including 2.9 years between symptom onset and first presentation and 5.8 years between first presentation and diagnosis. Five doctors on average were seen prior to diagnosis. However, there was a reduction in the interval between first presentation and diagnosis over time, from 8.4 years for those presenting before 2005, to two years for those presenting after 2012. While diagnostic delay is decreasing, CPP, irrespective of aetiology, continues to have a significant negative impact on the lives of those affected.
Background Approximately one in four pregnant women undergo an induction of labour. The purpose of this study is to investigate the clinical effectiveness, safety, and cost-effectiveness for mothers and babies of two methods of cervical ripening – inpatient care for women starting induction with vaginal prostaglandin E2 hormones, or allowing women to go home for 18 to 24 h after starting induction with a single-balloon catheter. Methods/design This is a multi-centre randomised controlled trial in New Zealand. Eligible pregnant women, with a live singleton baby in a cephalic presentation who undergo a planned induction of labour at term, will be randomised to outpatient balloon-catheter induction or in-hospital prostaglandin induction. The primary outcome is caesarean section rate. To detect a 24% relative risk reduction in caesarean rate from a baseline of 24.8%, with 80% power and 5% type 1 error, will require 1552 participants in a one to one ratio. Discussion If outpatient balloon-catheter induction reduces caesarean section rates, has additional clinical benefits, and is safe, cost-effective, and acceptable to women and clinicians, we anticipate change in induction of labour practice around the world. We think that home-based balloon-catheter induction will be welcomed as part of a patient-centred labour-induction care package for pregnant women. Trial registration Australia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR), ACTRN: 12616000739415. Registered on 6 June 2016.
Background The incidence of postpartum anaemia (PPA) in New Zealand, and the extent of intravenous iron (IV‐iron) use in its treatment, are unknown. Aims To report the incidence of PPA in three district health board (DHB) regions and describe current management of moderate to severe PPA, including by ethnicity. Materials and Methods Retrospective observational study of PPA (haemoglobin (Hb) <100 g/L) in three DHBs from July–December 2019. Cases with moderate to severe PPA (Hb <90 g/L) were reviewed and management compared to local and national guidance. Logistic regression examined demographic associations of PPA. Results There were 8849 women who gave birth during the study period: 4076 (46%) had postpartum Hb testing and 1544 (38%) had PPA. Of those tested, and after adjusting for deprivation and region, European women had lower adjusted odds ratios compared to Māori for being identified as having PPA (0.46, 95% CI 0.37–0.57, P < 0.01). Of 681 women with Hb <90 g/L, 278 (41%) received IV‐iron only, 66 (10%) red blood cell transfusion (RBC‐T) only and 155 (23%) both. Of those receiving RBC‐T, 40/221 (18%) were actively bleeding. Māori (92/138, 67%) and Pacific (127/188, 68%) women with Hb <90 g/L had the highest incidence of IV‐iron use. No guidelines provided recommendations for haemodynamically stable women without active bleeding. Conclusion The incidence and management of PPA differs by ethnicity but fewer than half of the women had Hb testing, making precise determination of incidence impossible. The majority of women with Hb <90 g/L received IV‐iron, with or without RBC‐T.
Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) causes important negative effects on quality of life. Endometriosis is the most common cause of CPP in females, and diagnostic delay is over six years internationally. Data remain scarce for CPP impact or diagnostic delay in Aotearoa New Zealand. This study used an online survey to explore the impact of CPP on various life domains for those aged over 18. Additionally, for those with an endometriosis diagnosis, diagnostic delay and factors affecting this over time were explored. There were 800 respondent (620 with self-reported endometriosis). CPP symptoms, irrespective of final diagnosis, started prior to age 20 and negatively impacted multiple life domains including employment, education, and relationships. Mean diagnostic delay for those with endometriosis was 8.7 years, including 2.9 years between symptom onset and first presentation and 5.8 years between first presentation and diagnosis. Five doctors on average were seen prior to diagnosis. However, there was a reduction in the interval between first presentation and diagnosis over time, from 8.4 years for those presenting before 2005, to two years for those presenting after 2012. While diagnostic delay is decreasing, CPP, irrespective of aetiology, continues to have a significant negative impact on the lives of those affected.
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