The "mother-friendly hospital" model aims to enhance care quality by avoiding unnecessary, non-evidence-based interventions and supporting natural physiological processes from early pregnancy to postpartum. This study evaluated the impact of mother-friendly hospital criteria on labor pain, maternal satisfaction, and maternal and fetal outcomes. Mother-friendly hospital practices emphasizing minimal intervention and physiologic support reduce labor pain, improve maternal satisfaction, and enhance neonatal outcomes. Implementing mother-friendly approaches ensures safe, high-quality, mother-centered maternity care. The results of our study showed that mother-friendly approaches increased maternal satisfaction during the childbirth process and reduced pain scores. These results revealed that mother-friendly practices not only improve the childbirth experience of women but also contribute positively to maternal and neonatal health. Therefore, supporting and expanding the integration of mother-friendly approaches into the healthcare system is of great importance for improving the quality of obstetric services.
This prospective study included term pregnant women delivering between February and June 2025 at Sakarya Research and Training Hospital (Group 1, with mother-friendly practices) and Ümraniye Research and Training Hospital (Group 2, without such practices). Exclusion criteria were maternal age \>45 years, chronic systemic disease, preeclampsia or gestational diabetes, prolonged rupture of membranes with infection, preterm birth (\<37 weeks), and small-for-gestational-age infants (\<2 SD). Maternal characteristics, labor interventions, non-pharmacological methods, postpartum hemorrhage, labor duration, pain levels using the Visual Analog Scale (VAS), and fetal outcomes (birth weight, Apgar scores, NICU admission) were recorded. Maternal satisfaction was assessed in the first postpartum hour using the Birth Satisfaction Scale. A total of 281 women were included (Group 1: 136, Group 2: 145). Groups were similar in age, BMI, education, employment, gestational week, labor duration, and postpartum hemorrhage (p\>0.05). Latent phase, active phase, and postpartum VAS scores were significantly lower in Group 1 (p\<0.001). Maternal satisfaction scores were higher in Group 1 (p\<0.001). NICU admissions were lower in Group 1 (2.9% vs. 9.7%, p=0.022), and first- and fifth-minute Apgar scores were higher (p\<0.001).
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
281
The Obstetrics Clinics of Sakarya Research and Training Hospital
Sakarya, Adapazarı, Turkey (Türkiye)
Composite adverse maternal and neonatal outcome
A composite outcome including at least one of the following: cesarean delivery, postpartum hemorrhage, severe perineal trauma, low 5-minute Apgar score (\<7), or NICU admission.
Time frame: From delivery to hospital discharge, 1. day
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