Tag Archives: physiological breech

How ‘evidence-based’ is your Algorithm?

Vaginal breech birth (VBB) is a controversial area of research, in an area of high obstetric litigation. Understandably, people are wary of introducing changes in practice that could expose them, mothers or babies to additional risks. Our research team responds frequently to questions and challenges about our approach, how it aligns with national guidance, and the evidence base.

Recently, a colleague became concerned after reading that the Health Services Investigation Board (HSIB) had presented evidence in Parliament in 2020 about the use of an algorithm to assist a baby’s birth.

The report did not indicate which algorithm was used in this instance, and there are many in circulation. Neither Breech Birth Network nor the OptiBreech Collaborative have ever produced an algorithm for use by maternity triage teams to support breech births at home, nor have we ever promoted the use of our algorithm for this purpose. We have not been informed by any sites in the south-east of England that have been using our algorithm that they have been instructed by the HSIB to stop using it.

How does the OptiBreech Algorithm align with national guidance?

The Physiological Breech Birth Algorithm (OptiBreech Algorithm) is designed to guide clinical decision-making during simulation training, to develop these skills for use in practice. The Vaginal Breech Birth training is delivered via the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG). The 2023 course was attended by 105 obstetricians and midwives from across the UK, and international visitors.

The description of manoeuvres in our algorithm is fully compliant with RCOG Management of Breech Presentation guidance, which states that, “If the operator has the skills of undertaking the manoeuvres with the mother in a forward position these should be performed without delay.”

In the RCOG guideline, all evidence relating to management of active second stage is based on ‘expert opinion.’ This guidance states that, “[I]ntervention to expediate breech birth is required if there is evidence of poor fetal condition or if there is a delay of more than 5 minutes from delivery of the buttocks to the head, or of more than 3 minutes from the umbilicus to the head.”

How does the OptiBreech Algorithm differ from national guidance?

Our Algorithm and OptiBreech guideline recommend that the birth should be complete within (including time for manoeuvres): 7 minutes from rumping (both buttocks and anus visible on the perineum), 5 minutes from the birth of the pelvis, and/or 3 minutes from the birth of the umbilicus. This is more conservative than the RCOG guideline and, in principle, less likely to contribute to delay in a baby’s birth – unless earlier intervention actually causes complications (see below).

The RCOG guidance was published in 2017 and is intended to be updated every three years. It has not since been updated, but that does not mean that the evidence base has not moved on.

What evidence is the OptiBreech Algorithm based on?

First version

The first version of the Physiological Breech Birth Algorithm was used in Breech Birth Network training in 2017. It was based on video evidence conducted with Dr Anke Reitter. This structured study of video evidence measured median and range interval times for a series of upright breech birth videos. We also recorded the observable mechanisms (position changes) of the breech baby as they journeyed out of the maternal pelvis, and how these related to whether attendants used interventions to facilitate the birth. From this data, we produced an algorithm, including indications that assistance is needed and which interventions were indicated.

Prior to this, training had been based on a combination of instructing attendants to remain “Hands off the breech,” or to perform a set of routine manoeuvres, each of which are only appropriate to supine positions. This was clearly causing confusion and delay.

Refinements

Midwife Emma Spillane then further tested the time intervals with a case-control design and found similar results. While head and arm entrapment only occurred once each, when interventions were used, attendants to ‘case’ births (neonatal admissions or death) waited almost twice as long to intervene as those at ‘control’ births (no neonatal admission).

How has the OptiBreech Algorithm been tested in practice?

Currently, the OptiBreech Algorithm guides vaginal breech birth management within all OptiBreech research, alongside a more detailed OptiBreech Practice Guideline. These materials are reviewed regularly within the OptiBreech Collaborative, based on reviews of their use in practice and our continually evolving evidence base. We follow a Community of Practice approach and host frequent webinars focused on developments in practice.

There are more outcome data associated with use of the OptiBreech Algorithm than any other breech algorithm we can identify. To date, we have evaluated the effects of training and service delivery based on the OptiBreech Algorithm in three prospective studies:

The training evaluation

In our 2016-2019 evaluation, obstetricians and midwives received training in ‘physiological breech birth’ based on the OptiBreech Algorithm. We compared clinical outcomes for births attended by someone who had completed the training with those not attended by someone who had completed the training. We prospectively recorded 0/21 (0%) severe neonatal outcomes when VBBs were attended by someone who had completed the OptiBreech training, compared to 5/69 (7.2%) where no clinicians present had completed the training.

The implementation evaluation

We evaluated how well thirteen National Health Service (NHS) hospitals were able to implement breech intrapartum teams and provide OptiBreech-trained professionals for VBBs, planned or unplanned. This study observed one neonatal SAE among 82 planned (1.2%) and 40 actual VBBs (2.5%). In the birth where the SAE occurred, the woman was positioned in a supine position, had spinal anaesthesia prior to the start of second stage, and Loveset’s and Mauriceau-Smellie-Veit (M-S-V) were used as instructed in the PROMPT flowchart.

Among VBBs, 34/39 (87.2%) were complete within 5 minutes of the birth of the pelvis. One was born very quickly, without an attendant, so the data is missing.

The prospective observational cohort (In Press)

Our prospective observational cohort study collects outcomes for women who receive OptiBreech collaborative care for a planned or unplanned VBB, currently across 10 NHS sites. Management of labour is based on the OptiBreech Algorithm and Practice Guideline

In our latest analysis of data received to 8 September 2023, the database records 97 planned and 42 actual VBBs. None of them involved a neonatal SAE. Two babies had an Apgar <7 at 5 minutes (2.1%). We have interval data available for 30 of these births, and 27 of them (90%) were completed within 5 minutes of the birth of the pelvis.

Total prospective VBBs

These studies include a total of 200 prospectively observed* and 103 actual OptiBreech VBBs, with one neonatal SAE. This corresponds to a rate of 0.5% for planned VBB and 1.0% for actual VBBs to date.

(* The training evaluation did not include planned VBBs that ended in caesarean birth. These rates could change as we accumulate further data.)

How does this compare to other vaginal breech birth research?

To measure neonatal severe adverse events (SAEs), we use a composite measure, that is made up of: neonatal mortality (death, neonatal admission to SCBU/NICU for >4 days, Apgar <4 at 5 minutes, HIE Grade 3, Intubation / ventilation >24 hours, parenteral or tube feeding >24 hours, seizures or convulsions > 24 hours, peripheral nerve / brachial plexus injury present at discharge, skull fracture, spinal cord injury). This measure is based on a similar composite used in the Term Breech Trial and PREMODA studies.

In the Term Breech Trial, the neonatal SAE rate for planned VBB was 52/1039 (5.0%) overall and 29/511 (5.7%) in countries with a low overall perinatal mortality rate, such as the UK.

In PREMODA, the neonatal SAE rate for planned VBB was 40/2502 (1.6%).

In the largest study of VBB in the UK this century, Pradhan et al reported a low Apgar (<7 at 5 minutes) rate of 52/882 (5.9%).

Does immediate assistance result in more complications?

Among the 103 actual VBBs we have evaluated, 88.4% were completed within five minutes of the birth of the pelvis, and the neonatal SAE rate was 1%. A rate of 88.4% under 5 minutes is NOT achievable without actively encouraging or assisting the birth. Our guidance is clearly not resulting in an increase in serious complications. In our next analysis, we will look at rates of assistance and minor complications.

Who are the OptiBreech Collaborative? And what is the basis for their claims of expertise?

The OptiBreech Collaborative consists of the Principal Investigators for our research at various sites across the UK, including breech specialist midwives and obstetricians. We all support planned (and unplanned), term, singleton VBBs regularly. Names are acknowledged in our recent publications. The Collaborative is led by Dr Shawn Walker, a consultant midwife and the chief investigator of the OptiBreech studies.

The RCOG guidance states, “Guidance for the case selection and management of vaginal breech birth should be developed in each department by the healthcare professionals who supervise such births.”

We are not even certain the authors of the RCOG guidance, who are eminent, experienced and well-respected obstetricians, are regularly supervising planned, term, singleton VBBs. We certainly know that a majority of consultant obstetricians in the UK are not regularly supervising planned, term, singleton VBBs. If women are to be believed, many professionals are actively discouraging planned VBB by providing only inaccurate and/or biased information.

The RCOG guidance points to ‘an article by Evans’ (not publicly available) to describe the technique and manoeuvres to be used for VBBs in an ‘all fours’ position. We absolutely credit Jane Evans and Mary Cronk with introducing VBB in an ‘all fours’ position to UK practice with the first ever training provided, and their training was our starting point. Mary Cronk (who attended a total of 25 VBBs in her career) introduced the phrase, “Hands off the breech.” This has been widely adopted by the RCOG and other guidelines. But neither Evans nor Cronk has ever shared any outcome data. The OptiBreech effort has transparently reported 200 prospectively observed VBBs.

While we eagerly began with Evans-Cronk methods, our own experience and research has simply taught us that we get better outcomes when we assist the birth sooner rather than later, using our physiology-based, responsive approach rather than a routine set of manoeuvres. That is what we practice, that is what we evaluate, and that is what we teach.

We never expected that we would end up recommending more active intervention and liberal use of episiotomy with any delay on the perineum (after other methods are used). But there is no point in doing research if you do not believe the results and allow it to guide your practice.

What is the evidence for other algorithms currently in use?

We cannot identify a single study that has compared outcomes for VBBs before and after training based on a different breech algorithm with actual clinical outcome data that improved, other than ours.

We have identified one study (Hardy et al 2020), which evaluated training based on the ‘appropriate manoeuvres,’ Lovesets and M-S-V. The pre-training low Apgar rate was 0/56 and post-training it was 7/80 (8.8%, p=0.041). Special care nursery admissions also increased. In our view, these methods should not continue to be taught unless someone can produce any evidence at all that teaching them improves clinical outcomes.

We would be happy to be corrected. Please do direct us to any available empirical evidence underpinning other breech training or algorithms currently in use across the UK or elsewhere.

— Shawn

Vaginal breech birth course at the RCOG

Update December 2023: We are pleased to announce that our fully-evaluated course, the foundational training for those participating in the OptiBreech Trial, will be offered for the second year in a row through the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, on 9 May 2024Book here.

This will be of particular interest to obstetric specialty trainees, many of whom will be able to use study leave and have course fees paid (50%) through educational budgets because the course is hosted by the RCOG.

We look forward to supporting more obstetricians, midwives and paramedics to feel confident in their ability to support vaginal breech births, and to provide appropriate hands-on assistance when indicated.

Spaces limited. Book here.

Supporting the OptiBreech Teams

This Monday, we held a training day at St. Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, London, to support the Imperial OptiBreech Team, led by Consultant Obstetrician Sabrina Das.

OptiBreech Just Giving Page

We will be donating 10% of any revenue obtained from this and all future study days to the OptiBreech Just Giving page, which is raising money to provide sites with extra support so that team members can continue to be on-call for women planning a vaginal breech birth.

We would be incredibly grateful if you would join us in this support by donating if you can and sharing the link with your social networks.

Below is some recent research to demonstrate how we are helping to make breech services better and safer for all families:

First OptiBreech results poster! Walker, S., Dasgupta, T., Hunter, S., Reid, S., Shennan, A., Sandall, J., Davies, S., 2022. Preparing for the OptiBreech Trial: a mixed methods implementation and feasibility study. BJOG An Int. J. Obstet. Gynaecol. 129, 70.  https://epostersonline.com/rcog2022/node/4909

Spillane E, Walker S, McCourt C, 2022. Optimal time intervals for vaginal breech births: a case-control study. NIHR Open Res. 2, 45.https://doi.org/10.3310/nihropenres.13297.1

Walker S, Dasgupta T, Halliday A, Reitter A, 2021. Development of a core outcome set for effectiveness studies of breech birth at term (Breech-COS): A systematic review on variations in outcome reporting. Eur. J. Obstet. Gynecol. Reprod. Biol. 263, 117–126. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejogrb.2021.06.021

Reflections on International Day of the Midwife, 2022

Yesterday was International Day of the Midwife. I saw but didn’t participate in the social media celebrations. Not because I wasn’t feeling it, but because my clinical academic midwife life was full to the brim. This included:

This is the dress I made for Professor Jim Thornton’s retirement party, which I couldn’t attend due to another breech birth!
  • Supporting a planned OptiBreech vaginal breech birth through the night and until the birth occurred in the morning;
  • Conducting two interviews for the Wellcome Biomedical Vacation Scholarship at 9.30 and 11.00 — amazing candidates this year!;
  • Receiving the news that the OptiBreech team has been awarded a £15k ESRC Impact Acceleration Grant;
  • Receiving and responding to the news that both my funder and my employer have received complaints that the OptiBreech Project is ‘promoting vaginal breech birth;’
  • Being a keynote speaker in the Virtual International Day of the Midwife 2022 conference at 2 pm;
  • Allowing my little dog to take me for a walk to support my physical and mental health;
  • Taking a massive nap; and
  • Spending a wild evening in on my sofa, knitting a jumper for my son Waldo the Stonemason and listening to a Miss Marple audio book.

If you feel exhausted just reading that list, you’re as human as me!

A team is not a group of people that work together. A team is a group of people that trust each other.

– Simon Sinek, shared by Céline, an attendee at my VIDM presentation

OptiBreech

This feasibility study is undoubtedly the most challenging and most rewarding thing I have ever done in my life. Being a research leader means being a change leader, and change is never easy. The OptiBreech Project is proposing a paradigm change in the way we support vaginal breech birth. This means a change from promoting caesarean section (CS) to supporting each individual women’s choice of mode of birth, in line with NICE Guidance. And it means a change from using unreliable ‘selection criteria,’ which are also inconsistent with the concept of individual choice, to relying on specialist expertise to respond to unfolding and infinitely unique circumstances.

When I sit down to eat some dark chocolate and peanut butter because I’ve worked my butt off today …

Being a breech specialist is not easy. In addition to a lot of time spent on-call, it’s not like working in a low-risk midwifery setting, where you can anticipate 90% of women will have the normal birth that they want. Many women are heart-broken when they find out their baby is breech. We can support them to plan an elective CS, and some women are happy about this, but many are very disappointed, even when they feel this is the best option for them and their baby. For those who want to plan a vaginal birth, but only if the baby is head-down, baby turning (ECV, external cephalic version) is only successful up to 50% of the time. We are still there for women when it does not work.

For those who want to plan a vaginal breech birth, the barriers sometimes seem impossible. It’s not uncommon for women to make an informed decision to plan a physiological breech birth (PBB) and return to clinic in tears because of the way someone has spoken to them, be that another health care professional, a friend or family member, or an unkind stranger on social media with opinions about the wisdom of their choice. The criticism, judgement and stigma can feel very heavy at such a vulnerable time. Our interviews with women on the study indicate they have felt supported to change their minds and plan an elective CS in these circumstances. Of course we can and do facilitate women changing their minds, but we can’t take away the hurt women feel when they wished for more support to make a different choice.

Birthing people who stick with their choice to birth vaginally despite such ubiquitous doubt frequently want reassurance that everything will be okay. Of course, we can never guarantee a perfect outcome. We can only guarantee that we are doing our best to increase the chances we will get professionals with enhanced training and experience to their birth. We believe this will improve outcomes for these births (that is the premise of the research), but we will not know until many OptiBreech births have occurred. And we all have to be prepared for a higher need for intrapartum CS to achieve a safe outcome for breech babies, even when trying for a vaginal birth.

Those of us supporting women who choose physiological breech births face similar criticism and judgement on a regular basis. Sometimes the lack of respect and unkindness feels overwhelming, and it is tempting to succumb to despair. I find it helps to remember that behaviour like this comes from a place of fear, a belief that doing things differently could have disastrous outcomes. Nobody wants this, and nobody wants to be responsible for it. In difficult times, I lean into the support I feel from many wonderful midwifery and obstetric colleagues, who help bring me back to a place of compassionate understanding. Only by opening to understanding each other can we move towards trust and safety — physical, emotional and spiritual safety in each others’ hands.

Listening to my ‘Joy and Love’ playlist helps too. Here’s a mini playlist of my favourite Resistance Revival Chorus songs, for anyone who needs them today.

Continuous cyclic pushing: a non-invasive approach to optimising descent in vaginal breech births — The OptiBreech Project

Shawn Walker, RM PhD, King’s College London and Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, West Middlesex Hospital Sabrina Das, MB ChB, MRCOG, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Queen Charlottes & Chelsea Hospital Emma Spillane, RM MSc, Kingston Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Amy Meadowcroft, RM, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust Background In the […]Continuous cyclic pushing: a non-invasive approach to optimising descent in vaginal breech births — The OptiBreech Project

New year, new course, new password, new opportunities

Happy new year, breech advocates! We’ve got nearly 10 hours of evidence-packed, video-rich, detail-loving breech birth training content waiting for you.

Our fully updated 2022 course is now on-line. To help you reach your new year’s resolution of developing some beautiful breech skills, the course will be available at a discounted price of £50 for the first two weeks of January. No code needed; access is for one year.

Image by Katherine Gilmartin

Along with a new course, our Vimeo library has a NEW PASSWORD. This is available from the “Resources for Teaching and Implementation” section of any course you are enrolled in, along with our amazing Dropbox of guidelines and training resources. Registered users have permission to use the content for non-profit teaching purposes — because learning together is the safest, most effective way to do it.

More about why we change this on an annual basis.

All of our online courses also come with free access to our Online Webinars. These are one-hour discussions on topics that have arisen during the course of our practice or others’, where we share learning and reflection with each other.

If you have previously completed any of our on-line courses, you are eligible to register for the Refresher course for only £10/year. This is exactly the same as the main course, but for a nominal cost to help us keep our platforms online. You can review the course, or just complete the assessment to obtain a new certificate for your portfolio.

Image by Katherine Gilmartin

Anyone organising or attending one of our face-to-face courses will be given free access to the on-line course for one year. Due to the on-going pandemic and need for social distancing, we rarely have external places to offer as we did pre-2020, but you can still host a study day for yourself and your colleagues.

If your site is participating in the OptiBreech Trial, your free online training package has already been updated.

What if I have attended an in-person course in the past? Access to the Refresher Course is only available to those who have purchased and completed one of our on-line courses, beginning in 2021. All of our previous courses have been advertised with one year’s access to our Vimeo Library. Content is updated regularly, so our recent courses are significantly expanded, based on current research, compared to those of previous years. If you have completed the main course, the system will automatically consider you eligible to take the Refresher. If you use our videos for teaching within your institution, we encourage you to ask your employer to reimburse your training so you can continue to maintain access.

Opportunities

Finally, some opportunities to become more involved in Breech Birth Network. We would really like some help with the following, and if you are willing to make a regular commitment and develop the skills necessary, we can also pay you! Emma and I developed the skills to do all this because that is what was necessary, and we know others can too.

Ideally, we would like to involve people who are supporting breech births professionally in some way, so that the learning that occurs in these roles also spills over into developing your own practice. That’s what makes it worthwhile for us. And obvs, we expect that you would have completed our training to know what you are getting into and that your approach to breech birth aligns with ours.

  • Online Webinatrix. We do our online webinar series ad hoc at the moment, but we’d like it to happen regularly.
  • Video Master. We have a large Vimeo library, but in order to make the most of it, it needs to be organised — edited, tagged, consent forms stored securely, etc.
  • Online education Diva. In addition to developing new content based upon new evidence or learning from practice in our communities, we have a need to develop translated versions of our courses to make them more accessible to a wider audience. We use Articulate 360 and WordPress, and although we don’t expect you to come in with those skills, we need someone who is willing to develop them to get the job done.
  • Accounting Guru. This doesn’t necessarily need to be a birth professional. We use Xero, and our amazing admin assistant Charlie has been doing this for us for a few years, but now needs to hand over due to other exciting things happening in her life.

If you are interested in any of these roles and prepared to make a commitment to helping our small, not-for-profit enterprise grow, please get in touch using the form below.

Training evaluation published

Breech Birth Network are pleased to announce the publication of an evaluation of our physiological breech birth training, conducted in eight NHS hospitals across England and Northern Ireland. Click on the image below to read the full evaluation.

Highlights

  • Multi-disciplinary training, involving NHS midwives and obstetricians
  • Only training to have demonstrated an increase, rather than a decrease, in vaginal breech births following delivery of the training package, although this was not statistically significant
  • Use of upright positions at birth increased significantly
  • Pilot data: no adverse outcomes among births attended by someone who had completed the training, compared to a background rate of 7%
  • Pilot data: perineal outcomes similar to cephalic births

Congratulations to midwife Stella Mattiolo, who collected and analysed this data as part of her Masters in Research.

What is ‘physiological breech birth?’

‘Physiological breech birth’ is an approach to care informed by evidence about the physiological processes of vaginal breech births, and an approach to clinical education based on evidence about how professionals learn to facilitate breech births.

I spend a lot of time communicating about vaginal breech birth, and equally importantly, a lot of time listening to how other people communicate about vaginal breech birth. Lately, I have become aware that many people misunderstand what ‘physiological breech birth’ is. This causes difficulties in communication and prevents current research evidence from improving the safety of vaginal breech birth as quickly as it could.

Image from Dr Anke Reitter, 2019

It’s my job to help clarify so that research can be used to improve safety and choice, as it is intended. Let’s start with what physiological breech birth is NOT:

Physiological breech birth is NOT ‘upright breech birth,’ ‘standing breech,’ or ‘all fours breech.’ Upright maternal birth positions are a TOOL and not a RULE of physiological breech birth. The reference standard is that, in a normally progressing birth, the woman or birthing person should give birth in the position of their preference. For many women having an unmedicated birth, particularly in midwife-led settings, this will be an upright position. Therefore, the logic goes, a ‘normal breech birth’ is one in which the woman is enabled to give birth in the position of her choice. Requiring supine positioning is an intervention.

How does this fit with the RCOG guideline (2017)? This states: “Either a semi-recumbent or an all-fours position may be adopted for delivery and should depend on maternal preference and the experience of the attendant. If the latter position is used, women should be advised that recourse to the semi-recumbent position may become necessary.”

The RCOG supports the use of upright positioning, but suggests this should be dependent on maternal preference and the experience of the attendant. Our recent analysis of video evidence (2020) showed that conversion to supine maternal position occurs within 10 seconds when use of supine manoeuvres is required. Therefore, the most recent evidence indicates that, while providers should continue to inform women that they may need them to turn over if the birth is very complicated, the experience of the attendant does not need to influence a woman’s initial choice of birthing position. Even if the attendant knows only supine manoeuvres.

Permission to use this video for teaching purposes is granted. Just access this page and click the full screen icon.

Where it is possible and safe to support a woman’s liberty in her birthing process, that’s what we should be doing, right? There is no evidence to indicate that use of supine birthing position improves outcomes for mothers and/or babies compared to enabling upright positioning. There is also no evidence to support the use of some manoeuvres over others; only things, like pulling, we know are dangerous. If a local guideline stipulates that women should be asked to assume a supine position to birth, this is out of line with both current RCOG guidance and the principles of woman-centred care.

Physiological breech birth is NOT, “It’s just hands off the breech. Just breathe, wait for the next contraction.”

The penny dropped for me after hearing two different midwives in two different cities describe to two other people what ‘physiological breech birth is’ using exactly this phrase, word for word. And then participating in risk management reviews following adverse outcomes, where midwives had document that they were practising ‘hands off the breech.’ And then attending multiple births (and videos), where midwives were instructing women to ‘just breathe, wait for the next contraction,’ even when there was concern about fetal condition and the situation was becoming urgent. Because this is what they had been taught. ‘Hands off the breech’ has become a dogma with unintended consequences. Instructing someone to avoid pushing when they feel the urge is an INTERVENTION. It has no evidence to back it up, nor any good theoretical basis other than preventing people from pulling when they don’t know what else to do.

It’s not surprising that some senior managers are cautious about enabling ‘physiological breech birth,’ if this is what they understand it to be, especially if they have participated in adverse outcome reviews where this sort of practice has been described.

But, due to science, we know how to do better. Our video analysis showed that in a sample of 42 births, the birth was complete within 2:46 of the birth of the pelvis in 75% of cases. Regarding birth intervals, the RCOG guideline states that breech births should be assisted if there is delay of more than 5 minutes from the buttocks to the head. We are in the same ballpark of the RCOG’s recommendation based on expert opinion. But now we know that if you wait this long to assist, you are already outside the normal reference range.

Physiological breech birth is not contradicting our already strong, evidence-based guideline. Rather, current, living, emerging evidence is refining it.

Permission granted to use for teaching purposes

Historical use of the phrase ‘physiological breech birth’

Midwife Jane Evans used the phrase ‘physiological breech birth’ in her 2012 article, Understanding Physiological Breech Birth. In it, Evans shares her insights and descriptions of the mechanisms based upon her observations in clinical practice. Those of use who use this phrase in our research have continued in this tradition, using systematic, planned observational and other research methods. Many of her observations we have confirmed; some have been modified.

How to let the evidence help you

Let’s say you are a Practice Development Midwife. You teach the breech birth update in a 40-minute slot, using materials commonly used in other obstetric emergencies training programmes. You’d like to ensure the update is as informed by up-to-date evidence* but don’t want to blow people’s minds apart with variations from what they already know, especially now. Good idea.

These are my top 3 tips for making sure the training you deliver evolves with the current evidence base (as of January 2021):

  1. Explain that the RCOG guideline recognises and supports women to adopt an upright position if that is their preference. Explain that the evidence indicates it takes less than 10 seconds to convert from upright to supine position. So even if providers are only experienced in supine complications, women should be supported to adopt the position of their choice. Although ‘lithotomy’ is not necessary, run through what conversion would look like in practice with your team if this helps people envision what is possible. Show them the video above if you are able.
  2. Recommend the use of maternal movement and effort if any delay is identified. Delay is defined as no progress for 90 seconds at any point once the baby begins to emerge. Our video research indicated that maternal movement (#giveitawiggle) and effort (gentle encouragement to “push”) alone is often effective, without the risk of iatrogenic damage from hasty manoeuvres, but it is not always used. Instead, women are often instructed to breathe through a contraction and resist the urge to push. Because time is of the essence, and contractions may be 5 minutes apart in 2nd stage, this is a safety risk. Even in supine births with an epidural in situ, simply asking the woman to push will also work in this situation if there is no obstruction. At this point, the uterus is almost entirely empty; a contraction creates the urge to push, but maternal effort does the job. The use of maternal agency to facilitate the birth is a first principle of physiological breech birth – it’s not all about the position.
  3. Teach shoulder press alongside MSV. Our video research found this simple manoeuvre was used in 57% of the upright breech births in our sample. Start by explaining the principle: elevating the occiput and flexing the fetal head, so that the smallest diameter delivers. When a woman is supine it is done like this … MSV. When a woman is upright, this works too … shoulder press. But the principle is the same. Then invite people to practice the one they are most likely to use. This flexible approach, recognising the variety of practice contexts, also reduces the risk an out-of-hospital midwife will ask a woman to lie down on the floor so she can perform MSV. This is a safety risk as it automatically deflexes the head.

Sure, the physiological breech birth evidence base covers a lot more. Our full training package (study day or on-line) goes into less common complications and their solutions, more about the research, and how to use the Algorithm to guide decision-making. A feasibility study is currently being conducted, hoping to trial a new care pathway based on physiological breech birth. But it is possible RIGHT NOW to use the available evidence to update current practice in a safer direction, without making major changes to what you are already doing.

In Summary

Lastly, if one can point out a single maxim in breech deliveries, take heed of the results of the experienced country midwife and doctor. They are usually very good, and their results are obtained by a policy of non-intervention. Do not interfere unless it is necessary, but when it is necessary interfere quickly and with certainty.

Ian Donald, 1956, Practical Obstetric Problems

The careful, systematic study of vaginal breech births that has taken place in the physiological breech birth tradition reflects this maxim. Do not intervene, not by dictating a birth position, not by instructing someone not to push, not at all, unless it is necessary. Due to a lack of exposure, many health care professionals just do not know how to recognise ‘when it is necessary’ and therefore cannot act quickly and with certainty, through no fault of their own. Due to physiological breech birth research, ‘when it is necessary’ can now be defined and described much more precisely. Therefore, it can be taught. And it can be tested.

But if the available research indicates simply stopping untested but commonly applied interventions may reduce identifiable risks, do we really need to wait for an RCT?

Shawn

P.S. A note on *up-to-date evidence. When preparing to write this blog, I did a brief literature search to find others (e.g. not ‘physiological breech’) who are publishing research related to the clinical practice of vaginal breech birth in the UK. The last I could find were Sloman et al 2016 and Pradhan et al 2005. Many of Sloman’s findings are consistent with those of other physiological breech researchers. I am keen to hear if anyone else in the UK is producing evidence concerning the clinical practice of vaginal breech birth at the moment — breech birth itself, not ECV or decision-making. Because it’s starting to feel surreal when people say, “We don’t teach/do physiological breech birth because it’s not evidence based …”

Here’s some!

Jan, H., Guimicheva, B., Gosh, S., Hamid, R., Penna, L. and Sarris, I. (2014), Evaluation of healthcare professionals’ understanding of eponymous maneuvers and mnemonics in emergency obstetric care provision. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 125: 228-231. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijgo.2013.12.011 — And one of the co-authors (L Penna) is also a co-author of the RCOG guideline. This is the reason we do not use eponyms when teaching skills on physiological breech birth study days.

Normalising breech birth at the European Congress on Intrapartum Care, 2021

Physiological breech birth will be one of the key topics at next year’s ECIC in Belgrade, Serbia. See information below for booking and consider submitting an abstract.

ECIC 2021

5th ECIC: European Congress on Intrapartum Care
Making Birth Safer

27-29 May 2021 · Belgrade, Serbia

Be one of the first 300 to registerRegister as early as today to take advantage of the discounted fee – available only to the first 300 participants!

Here are some good reasons why you should attend the 5th ECIC in 2021:

  • ECIC is a unique opportunity to learn standard obstetric skills
  • ECIC gives you knowledge and confidence in obstetrics
  • A congress where women in labour are the focus of midwives and obstetricians
  • Scientific and clinical challenges of intrapartum care on debate
  • Positive childbirth experience combined with the best available technology

REGISTER AND SAVE

PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME
ABSTRACT SUBMISSION
CONGRESS COMMITTEES

We look forward to meeting you in Belgrade!
info@eciccongress.eu
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Interesting follow up discussion on Twitter! …

Video analysis and Algorithm paper published!

Practical insight into upright breech birth from birth videos: a structured analysis” is now available on-line! (Reitter, Halliday and Walker, 2020, Birth – https://doi.org/10.1111/birt.12480) This paper represents a few years of hard work by Anke Reitter, me and our Research Assistant, Alexandra Halliday. It contains insights into birth timings and the mechanisms as observed in upright breech birth videos. The Physiological Breech Birth Algorithm is also included.

Download Algorithm

We look forward to much debate and discussion! Please share with anyone concerned about safe vaginal breech birth.

Love,

Shawn

Traduit par: Isabelle Brabant et Caroline Daelmans