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INTRODUCTION AND EPIDEMIOLOGY
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The thought of a woman presenting to the ED in active labor is justifiably a cause for anxiety—the emergency physician must contend not only with the often rusty recollection of the stages of normal delivery but also with the knowledge that there are serious and even fatal complications associated with labor. Maternal and fetal survival may depend on the ability to successfully manage preeclampsia, eclampsia, hemorrhage, shoulder dystocia, malpresentation, cord prolapse, breech delivery, or fetal distress. Every ED should be prepared to take care of a woman in active labor. Tools include a basic delivery kit, an infant warmer or isolate, and medical supplies and equipment for neonatal resuscitation (see Chapter 108, “Resuscitation of Neonates” and Tables 101-1 and 101-2).
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Out-of-hospital births occurred in 1.36% of births in 2012.1 Occasionally, planned home deliveries experience ...