# What Should Be Discussed When Considering a Vaginal Birth? A Delphi Consensus Study

**Authors:** Andrew Demetri, Anna Davies, Danya Bakhbakhi, Alexandra Hunt, Sharea Ijaz, Sheelagh McGuinness, Gemma Beasor, Gemma Clayton, Vicky Bradley, Eve Bunni, Carol Kingdon, Andrew Sharp, Christy Burden, Asma Khalil, Louise Kenny, Abi Merriel, Deborah Lawlor, Deborah Lawlor, Gordon Smith, Jane Norman, Jon Heron, Dame Tina Lavender, David Lissauer, Emma McGoldrick, Simon Grant, Sherif Abdel‐Fattah, Laura Bonnet, Mairead Black, Samuel Finnikin, Amie Wilson, Alexandra Freeman, Pete Blair, Katherine Birchenall, Joanne Johnson, Abigail Johnson, Chloe de Souza, Aine Dempsey, Gabriella Snook

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.70071 · Bjog · 2025-11-18

## TL;DR

This study created a standardized set of information points to help parents and professionals make informed decisions about vaginal birth.

## Contribution

A Delphi consensus method was used to develop a Core Information Set for vaginal birth discussions.

## Key findings

- 77 information items were identified and narrowed down to 19 through stakeholder consensus.
- The final set covers labor process, pain relief, complications, interventions, post-birth experiences, and baby outcomes.
- The CIS aims to improve informed decision-making and consistency in pre-birth discussions.

## Abstract

Spontaneous vaginal births are often the presumed choice, representing 45% of UK births. However, information about benefits and risks is inconsistently given, impacting decision‐making and experience. A Core Information Set (CIS) is an agreed set of information points discussed prior to a decision. We aimed to develop a CIS for vaginal birth.

A Delphi study was used to create the CIS. Information points were identified from a literature search, patient leaflets, interviews, and a survey. These informed a two‐round Delphi survey, where stakeholders rated item importance. Items rated critically important by ≥ 80% of parents or professionals, and of limited importance by < 15%, progressed to consensus meetings, where 20 parents and professionals discussed retained items. The final CIS was populated with an engagement group ensuring accessibility.

The study took place in the UK, with participants recruited online.

Pregnant and postnatal women, birth partners, healthcare professionals, medicolegal professionals, and representatives from relevant organizations.

A CIS for vaginal birth.

77 information items were identified. In round 1 (631 participants) of the Delphi Survey, 84.5% were from the patient group and 15.5% from the professional group; in round 2 (228 participants), 74.3% were from the patient group and 25.7% from the professional group. 29 items met the criteria for consensus discussion. The final CIS includes 19 information points addressing: labour process, pain relief, labour complications, procedures or interventions during labour, experiences after birth, outcomes for the baby and labour environment.

This CIS can facilitate discussions and support informed decision‐making about vaginal birth.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12770075/full.md

## References

62 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12770075/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12770075