Protocol - Mode of Delivery - Interview
Description
A woman who gave birth is asked several questions about how the baby was delivered.
Specific Instructions
The maternal interview should be administered if the obstetric medical record (Mode of Delivery - Medical Record Abstraction protocol) with information about the delivery is unavailable. The maternal interview may yield inaccurate information due to potential recall bias. Information from the maternal interview may supplement the information in the medical record.
Availability
Protocol
1. Before you had your new baby, did you ever have a baby by cesarean delivery or c-section (when a doctor cuts through the mother’s belly to bring out the baby)?
1[ ]No
2[ ]Yes
2. How was your new baby delivered?
[ ] Vaginally (if yes, then skip to question 5)
[ ] Cesarean delivery (c-section)
3. Which statement best describes whose idea it was for you to have a cesarean delivery (c-section)?
Check ONE answer
[ ] My health care provider recommended a cesarean delivery before I went into labor
[ ] My health care provider recommended a cesarean delivery while I was in labor
[ ] I asked for the cesarean delivery
4. What was the reason that your new baby was born by cesarean delivery (c-section)? Check ALL that apply
[ ] I had a previous cesarean delivery (c-section)
[ ] My baby was in the wrong position (such as breech)
[ ] I was past my due date
[ ] My health care provider worried that my baby was too big
[ ] I had a medical condition that made labor dangerous for me (such as heart condition, physical disability)
[ ] I had a complication in my pregnancy (such as preeclampsia, placental problems, infection, preterm labor)
[ ] My health care provider tried to induce my labor, but it didn’t work
[ ] Labor was taking too long
[ ] The fetal monitor showed that my baby was having problems before or during labor (fetal distress)
[ ] I wanted to schedule my delivery
[ ] I didn’t want to have my baby vaginally
[ ] Other Please tell us ____________________________
5. Did your doctor, nurse, or other health care worker try to induce your labor (start your contractions using medicine)?
1[ ]No → Skip Item 6
2[ ]Yes
[ ] I don’t know → Skip Item 6
6. Why did your doctor, nurse, or other health care worker try to induce your labor (start your contractions using medicine)? Check ALL that apply
[ ] My water broke and there was a fear of infection
[ ] I was past my due date
[ ] My health care provider worried about the size of the baby
[ ] My baby was not doing well and needed to be born
[ ] I had a complication in my pregnancy (such as low amniotic fluid or preeclampsia)
[ ] Labor stopped or was not progressing
[ ] I wanted to schedule my delivery
[ ] I wanted to give birth with a specific health care provider
[ ] Other Please tell us: __________________________________
Personnel and Training Required
No specific training is needed if data are collected through a self-administered questionnaire. If interviewers administer the questionnaire, the interviewer must be trained to conduct personal interviews with individuals from the general population and found competent to administer these particular questions (i.e., tested by an expert) at the end of the training. The interviewer should be trained to prompt respondents further if a "don’t know" response is provided.
Equipment Needs
These questions can be administered in a computerized or noncomputerized format (i.e., paper-and pencil instrument). Computer software is necessary to develop computer-assisted instruments. The interviewer will require a laptop computer or handheld computer to administer or to allow the respondent to self-administer a computer-assisted questionnaire.
Requirements
Requirement Category | Required |
---|---|
Major equipment | No |
Specialized training | No |
Specialized requirements for biospecimen collection | No |
Average time of greater than 15 minutes in an unaffected individual | No |
Mode of Administration
Self-administered or interviewer-administered questionnaire
Lifestage
Adolescent, Adult, Pregnancy
Participants
Mother after a live birth
Selection Rationale
The questions were used in the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS), a major study with thousands of participants.
Language
English, Spanish
Standards
Standard | Name | ID | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Human Phenotype Ontology | Induced vaginal delivery | HP:0030369 | HPO |
Human Phenotype Ontology | Forceps delivery | HP:0011411 | HPO |
caDSR Form | PhenX PX241301 - Mode Of Delivery Interview | 6873212 | caDSR Form |
Derived Variables
None
Process and Review
Not applicable.
Protocol Name from Source
Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS), Phase 7
Source
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) Phase 7 Standard Questions K1, K3, K6, K7, K9, K10.
Certification for the Spanish translation can be found here.
General References
Bovbjerg, M. L. & Siega-Riz, A. M. (2009). Exercise during pregnancy and cesarean delivery: North Carolina PRAMS, 2004-2005. Birth, 36(3), 200-207.
Protocol ID
241301
Variables
Export VariablesVariable Name | Variable ID | Variable Description | dbGaP Mapping | |
---|---|---|---|---|
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Cesarean_Delivery_History | ||||
PX241301010000 | Before you had your new baby, did you ever more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Cesarean_Idea_Initiation | ||||
PX241301030000 | Which statement best describes whose idea it more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Cesarean_Reason | ||||
PX241301040100 | What was the reason that your new baby was more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Cesarean_Reason_Other | ||||
PX241301040200 | What was the reason that your new baby was more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Induce_Labor | ||||
PX241301050000 | Did your doctor, nurse, or other health care more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Induce_Labor_Reason | ||||
PX241301060100 | Why did your doctor, nurse, or other health more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_Induce_Labor_Reason_Other | ||||
PX241301060200 | Why did your doctor, nurse, or other health more | N/A | ||
PX241301_Mode_Delivery_New_Baby | ||||
PX241301020000 | How was your new baby delivered? | N/A |
Measure Name
Mode of Delivery
Release Date
January 31, 2017
Definition
Information about the initiating event of a woman’s delivery, the mode of delivery, and if it was an assisted delivery.
Purpose
The mode of delivery may influence the health of the mother. Cesarean deliveries are becoming more common in the United States, often performed without a medical reason, and put the mother at increased risk of infection, hemorrhaging, blood clots, or experiencing a reaction to the anesthesia. Mode of delivery may also impact the health of the neonate. Cesarean section in the absence of labor has been associated with an increased occurrence of difficulties in respiratory transition to newborn life; for example, an increased risk of transient tachypnea of the newborn. Instrumental vaginal deliveries (forceps and vacuum) have been associated with increased risk of birth injuries such as facial nerve damage (forceps) and subgaleal hematomas (vacuum).
Keywords
pregnancy, vaginal delivery, cesarean delivery, Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, PRAMS, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, CDC, Maternal Fetal Medicine Units Network, MFMU, A Randomized Trial of Induction Versus Expectant Management, ARRIVE
Measure Protocols
Protocol ID | Protocol Name |
---|---|
241301 | Mode of Delivery - Interview |
241302 | Mode of Delivery - Medical Record Abstraction |
Publications
There are no publications listed for this protocol.