Risk Factors Associated With Epidural Use

Samuel M. Lancaster, Ursula M. Schick, Morwan M. Osman, Daniel A. Enquobahrie

Abstract


Background: Identify variables associated with intrapartum epidural use.

Methods: Odds ratios were calculated to quantify associations between selected variables and epidural use using a population-based case-control study of Washington State birth certificate data from 2009.

Results: Non-Whites had 10 - 45% lower odds of epidural use relative to Whites. Foreign-born women had 25 - 45% lower odds of epidural use compared to their US-born counterparts, except for Asians. Women who smoked or induced labor had higher roughly 2-fold higher odds of epidural use compared with non-smokers or women giving birth spontaneously, respectively. Women without a high school diploma or equivalent had lower odds of epidural use relative to those who graduated. Delivering at perinatal units, rural hospitals, or non-profit hospitals had ~50% lower odds of epidural use compared with secondary/teritiary perinatal units, urban hospitals or for-profit hospitals, respectively.

Conclusion: Several individual and health service-related variables were associated with epidural use. These findings elucidate the clinical relevance of epidural use, and dispariaties in its utilization and in quality of care during delivery.




doi:10.4021/jocmr810w

Correction in J Clin Med Res. 2016;8(8):623-623, http://dx.doi.org/10.14740/jocmr810wc1


Keywords


Epidural use; Foreign birth; Labor; Racial disparities

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