• Int J Obstet Anesth · Jul 2002

    Trends in obstetric anaesthesia and analgesia over a ten year period in the University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur.

    • Y K Chan, K P Ng, and C L Chiu.
    • Department of Anaesthesia, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. chanyk@medicine.med.um.edu.my
    • Int J Obstet Anesth. 2002 Jul 1;11(3):176-9.

    AbstractAvailable data for obstetric care in the University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur from 1987 to 1999 were reviewed. Despite incomplete data, we were able to determine fairly well the practice of obstetric anaesthesia and analgesia in the unit, and the changes over the years. There was a decline in the use of general anaesthesia for both elective and emergency caesarean sections from 41.3% and 69.4% respectively in 1995 to 21.6% and 26.9% respectively in 1999. By 1999, regional anaesthesia had become the most common method of anaesthesia administered in both elective (14.3% epidural and 63.5% spinal) and emergency (30.2% epidural and 42.6% spinal) caesarean sections. The percentage of patients delivering vaginally who received epidural analgesia appeared to have stabilised at about 8 to 9% in the last few years, with a gradual decline in the total instrumental delivery rate from a high of about 12% to the pre-epidural rate of 7%.

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