Pregnancy, Delivery, and Postpartum Experiences of Fifty-Four Women With Ostomies

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Abstract

Objective

The pregnancy, labor, and delivery experiences of women with ostomies are described.

Design

Patient survey.

Settings and subjects

Distribution of surveys to women with these experiences: patients of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, referrals by networking of ET nurses, and distribution of surveys at a national conference of the United Ostomy Association and through local ostomy associations.

Instrument

A 12-point questionnaire was adapted for each type of diversion: ileostomy, urostomy, continent ileostomy, colostomy, and pelvic reservoir.

Method

The survey was distributed to attendees at a national United Ostomy Association conference and local United Ostomy Association meetings. Surveys were distributed to other ET nurses in the mideastern United States region and to qualified patients at Cleveland Clinic Foundation.

Main outcome measure

The subjective experiences of pregnancy, labor, and delivery of women with ostomies are described.

Results

Seventy-five questionnaires were distributed and 54 women responded. Eight women (15%) had fertility problems. Stoma-related problems during the second or third trimester were reported by 68.5%. Most problems were corrected without medical intervention.

Conclusions

The presence of an ostomy should not be a deterrent to successful pregnancy and delivery.

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