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BMJ 2004;328:768 (27 March), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7442.768-a
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
EDITORThe study by Cluett et al reinforces anecdotal experience that allowing a woman in labour to have a good soak in a deep bath will relieve pain and facilitate labour.1 Indeed, it is a shame that the traditional big bath has been removed from the labour ward.
However, readers will have been misled by the headline on the cover of the BMJ"Giving birth in water." The study is about labouring in water, not delivery. I don't know how many of the women chose to deliver in the water bath, but from my quick scan through the paper I do not think that this was the intention. I note that there was a mean delay of six hours (range 2-10 hours) between women leaving the pool and giving birth.
This study is on water immersion as an option for women in the first stage of labour, not about
James B Robins, consultant
Inverclyde Royal Hospital, Greenock PA16 0XN robinsjim@aol.com