Incidence of epidural blood patch following obstetric regional analgesia in private Australian anaesthetic practice
2004; Elsevier BV; Volume: 14; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.ijoa.2004.06.002
ISSN1532-3374
AutoresA. Buettner, P. Popham, Dianne Morgan,
Tópico(s)Cardiovascular Issues in Pregnancy
ResumoCollection of audit data about epidural blood patches has traditionally relied on voluntary reporting, which is notoriously incomplete. The records of Medicare-funded Australian private obstetric practice, which represents 30% of all deliveries, allow a novel method of central data collection and retrieval.Data relating to all deliveries, epidurals and blood patches in private practice in Australia over a two-year period were retrieved from the Health Insurance Commission.The overall rate of epidural analgesia in labour was estimated at 30% and the proportion of epidurals that progressed to blood patching was 0.35%. The rate of epidural blood patching varied between states from 0.18% to 0.56%.Despite certain limitations of our data interpretation, we regard this technique as a useful audit tool capable of generating accurate and robust audit data that might otherwise be unobtainable.
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