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Emily Oster

1 minute read Emily Oster
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Emily Oster

Should I Consider Membrane Sweeping?

Q&A on encouraging labor onset

Emily Oster

1 minute read

Membrane stripping: Is this something that makes sense?

—Anonymous

Membrane stripping (or sweeping), for the uninitiated, is a procedure that is sometimes performed at the end of pregnancy to encourage labor onset. To do it, a doctor or midwife puts their finger through the cervix and sweeps it in a circle to detach the membranes from the wall of the uterus. The idea is that this would encourage labor to start on its own and decrease the need for an induction.

Most things people tell you will induce labor do not work. I’m thinking about eating dates, having sex, spicy food, drinking weird teas, eating pineapple, ordering the baby to come out, and so on. But membrane sweeping actually does seem to prompt labor. In a review of randomized studies, membrane sweeping decreased the need for induction of labor (it didn’t appear to change anything else — no changes in cesarean section rates, assisted vaginal birth, or outcomes for mom or baby). The only significant downside is it’s very uncomfortable.

So, to the question: Does it make sense? As a method for labor induction, it’s worth a try.

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