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The Effect of Labor Dance in the First Stage of Labor on Labor Pain, Anxiety, Duration of Labor, and Maternal Satisfaction with Labor: A Randomized Controlled Study.

Dilek Kalog Lu BiniciSongul Aktas
Published in: Journal of integrative and complementary medicine (2023)
Objective: The study aimed to examine the effects of labor dance applied in the first stage of labor on perceived labor pain, anxiety, duration of labor, and maternal satisfaction with labor. Design: This study is a randomized controlled trial. Methods: A sample size of 128 pregnant women was randomly assigned to a control ( n  = 64) or experimental ( n  = 64) group while ensuring equal numbers of primiparous and multiparous participants in each group. After admission to the hospital for parturition, and during the first stage of labor, the women in the experimental group were exposed to a 15-min labor dance every hour when the cervical dilation was between 3 and 8 cm. The labor dance included movements of the sacrum and waist massaged by a partner using a massage glove, which was accompanied by self-selected music. Outcome measures included the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), the State Anxiety Scale (SAS), and the Scale for Measuring Maternal Satisfaction (SMMS)-normal birth and labor duration. These were administered before the labor dance and at the end of the labor dance at three points of cervical dilation: 3, 5-6, and 7-8 cm for the experimental group, and at similar points in the control group: at the start of dilation and 15 min later. The data were analyzed using the generalized linear model and Mann-Whitney U tests. Results: In comparison to the control group, for the group performing the labor dance, the mean VAS scores were lower ( p  < 0.05) at each evaluation period, and the mean scores of total SMMS and some of its subdivisions were significantly higher in the experimental group ( p  < 0.05). There was no statistically significant difference between the SAS scores at any evaluation point, including postpartum ( p  > 0.05). Similarly, there were no significant differences in labor time ( p  > 0.05) between groups. Conclusions: The practice of labor dance was found to be effective in reducing the perceived labor pain in pregnant women and increasing maternal satisfaction at birth, but not on the duration of labor, and anxiety. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04746170).
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