Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
It is recommended that the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) takes into consideration the findings of this HSIB review when updating the RCOG Green Top shoulder dystocia guideline (No.42).
Thank you for your request and we can confirm that the findings of the HSIB report will be incorporated into the next iteration of the RCOG guideline for shoulder dystocia.
It is common ground in all national guidelines that shoulder dystocia is unpredictable – there are no clinically useful predictors, including for Large-for-Gestational-Age (LGA) babies.
The RCOG has commissioned a national Scientific Paper for the management of Large for Gestational Age infants and after extensive and robust peer review, publication has been deferred until the results of the NIHR Big Baby study are available.
The Montgomery judgement applies to all pregnancies; all women should be able to discuss their options for mode of birth with a balanced discussion of the risks and benefits of each.
The RCOG has published a patient information for elective caesarean birth and there is a shared decision-making tool for Induction of Labour at term from the Cochrane group for suspected LGA babies.
The RCOG shoulder dystocia guideline will acknowledge that the median Head-Body Delivery Interval in the HSIB cohort was seven minutes, which is very likely to be both causally associated with the hypoxic insult and is significantly longer than the median in large cohorts, post training.
The RCOG guideline will acknowledge the unrecognised discrepancies in the umbilical cord gases in the HSIB cohort and likely substandard management of the shoulder dystocia.
The RCOG guideline will acknowledge that the HSIB report recommendations relating to LGA infants are predominantly based on 10 babies that were recognised to weigh more than 4kg but did not have any documented discussion about their options.
This represents, at most, 0.2% of the infants whose birth was complicated by shoulder dystocia in England & Wales per annum and therefore is not representative.
The RCOG guideline update will emphasise that accurate and efficient management of shoulder dystocia is currently the most effective way of reducing neonatal injury and will provide recommendations for effective training, including alternative management manoeuvres, management of shoulder dystocia in a birth centre and optimising neonatal management after shoulder dystocia.
Response received on 11 May 2021.