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Nurs Womens Health ; 23(3): 200-216, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31171242

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To improve nurses' comfort in helping laboring woman void on a bedpan after initiation of epidural analgesia, to increase the frequency of bedpan use in the labor and birth unit, and to decrease the use of continuous indwelling Foley catheters during the intrapartum period. DESIGN: Quality improvement project. SETTING: A single large, midwestern U.S. hospital (>3,000 births annually), where bedpans are infrequently used after epidural placement. PARTICIPANTS: Registered nurses on a labor and birth unit. INTERVENTION/MEASUREMENTS: A 20-minute educational presentation that included current urinary catheter evidence-based practice, preferential use of bedpans, and methods to help women void successfully was taught to all registered nurses in the author's labor unit. Nurses rated on a scale of 0 (not comfortable at all) to 10 (extremely comfortable) their comfort level at helping a woman with a bedpan. Primary data were collected through a convenience sample of anonymous surveys (n = 52) completed by registered nurses regarding their experience with bedpan and catheter use during labor and their comfort level helping women be successful with voiding. This was followed by a retrospective chart audit for women with term, singleton pregnancies who labored with epidural analgesia. RESULTS: Nurses' comfort levels increased from an average of 5.7 to 7.2 (p = .067). Postepidural bedpan use increased from 5.5% (n = 12) to 19% overall (n = 20; p < .001), with five women using bedpans exclusively. When assisted with bedpan use, 38% (n = 12) of women were able to void 34 of the 53 times it was offered (64%). Use of continuous indwelling Foley catheters decreased from 61.7% (n = 137) to 54.7% (n = 58), and use of intermittent catheterization increased from 30.6% (n = 68) to 37.7% (n = 40). CONCLUSION: When assisted by nurses educated in and comfortable with different voiding techniques, women may be able to avoid medically unnecessary use of urinary catheters during labor.


Subject(s)
Analgesia, Epidural/nursing , Bathroom Equipment/standards , Labor, Obstetric/psychology , Nurse-Patient Relations , Nurses/psychology , Adult , Education, Nursing, Continuing/methods , Female , Humans , Pregnancy
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