Implications of time of day and day of the week for the outcome of birth

Lead Research Organisation: City, University of London
Department Name: School of Health Sciences

Abstract

One of our team had been involved in research from the 1970s onwards which showed that the birth of babies was spread unevenly through the days of the week. Our previous project, known as 'Birth Timing', which analysed over seven million births in England and Wales from 2005-2014, was the first national study of both the day and time of births and this new proposal will build on this work.

Our research team linked three large sets of routinely collected data to combine mother and baby records from three sources. These were birth registration, birth notification when NHS numbers are allocated to babies, and records about maternity care during labour and birth. A database was created to enable us to analyse the data.

Our results showed a regular weekly cycle with numbers of births increasing each day from Mondays to Fridays, lower numbers of births on Saturdays and lowest weekly numbers of births on Sundays. Fewest births occurred at Christmas. Births also varied seasonally, with a peak in late September. When labour involved no medical assistance, numbers of births were highest from midnight to 7am, peaking from 4am to 6am. They were lowest during the day and the hours up to midnight. Planned caesarean births were usually on weekday mornings. Births after induced labour were more likely to occur around midnight on Tuesdays to Saturdays, whether or not any medical assistance was needed, with a peak before public holidays.

As the variation in the timing of births by place and type of birth has implications for midwifery and medical staffing and for the organisation of maternity care more generally, further research is needed to use the new database to investigate the implications. We therefore propose research to investigate whether death rates at birth of children and their mothers and varies according to the time of day and day of the week. In addition, we hope to analyse variations in the rates of serious complications. We plan to move beyond the simple subdivision into time inside and outside 'normal working hours' and analyse outcomes at different times of day and night. Asthere are signs that some births are brought forward so that they occur before weekends and public holidays, we plan to analyse the implications of these selection processes.

It is also known that rates of planned caesareans and induced labours vary widely between maternity units and the extent of these variations is not explained by differences in the groups of women giving birth. The suggestion is that these differences reflect differences in obstetricians' and midwives' policies. We therefore plan to see how times of birth vary between units and whether they appear to be associated with these differences in policies.

Planned Impact

Who will benefit from this research?

There are two categories of potential beneficiaries from this research. The first is professionals, both clinicians working in the maternity services and commissioners who need to plan and pay for maternity provision. It is noteworthy that this area of research was first suggested to us by the Royal College of Obstetricians and the Royal College of Midwives and both organisations provided letters of support when we applied for funds for our previous project 'Births and their outcomes by time, day and year: a retrospective birth cohort data linkage study', to undertake the data linkage and analysis.

This research is equally relevant to women using maternity services. In the consultations we had with service users during our previous project, 'Births and their outcomes by time, day and year: a retrospective birth cohort data linkage study' we were told that press reports both of published research and also of speculations not based on evidence have led to anxiety among women going into labour at night and at weekends.

How will they benefit from this research?

The overall patterns of births, their possible associations with mortality and the extent to which these patterns are likely to vary between maternity units are likely to be important information for people responsible for managing midwifery staffing and availability of obstetric care at appropriate levels when it is needed. Although it will not, of course, enable quantification of staffing levels, it should provide additional insights to inform decision making.

For service users, the research should provide more robust information. If it points to specific factors, it should enable service user representatives in making their case to the services about specific changes which could lead to improvements in the availability of high quality maternity care irrespective of the time of day or night.

Publications

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Description Although the funding has finished, none of our work has yet been published. One article has been under review since November and other work has yet to be submitted. As a result, we are not yet in a position to report on key findings, as we do not yet have relevant outputs. We therefore are not in a position to complete this report this year.

This has been reported directly to the funder.
Exploitation Route It could be used in relation to planning staffing of maternity units, although, as the output will show it has raised questions for further investigation using other methods.
Sectors Healthcare,Other

 
Title Linkage of data recorded at birth registration and notification in England and Wales to data about care at birth 
Description Linkage of data from birth registration and notification to data from Maternity Hospital Episode Statistics and separately,to Patient Episode Database Wales 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact It enabled us to analyse births by time of day and day of the week in relation to data collected about care at birth. Data are held in secure facilities in the Office for National Statistics Secure Research Service and can be used by other researchers on application to relevant organisations responsible for the data. The TIGAR project has used the data we have linked and the PICNIC project is using the database now by linking it to census data. 
URL https://www.adruk.org/our-mission/our-impact/article/birth-cohort-data-linkage-study-228/
 
Description Involving the public with an analysis of daily, weekly and yearly cycles of births using linked data. Webinar in Office for National Statistics Research Excellence Series 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Office for National Statistics seminar May 12 2022
Mary Newburn, Miranda Dodwell, Rachel Plachcinski, Alison Macfarlane
Involving the public with an analysis of daily, weekly and yearly cycles of births using linked data
As a result of winning the Linked Administrative Data Award, one of the Office for National Statistics Secure Research Service's Research Excellence Awards, we were invited to give a webinar describing out public engagement work. As it was online, we don't have any precise information about its overall reach but we understand the audience was diverse.

We were also invited to prepare a written case study to go on the web site of Administrative Data Research UK .
https://www.adruk.org/our-mission/our-impact/default-30feeac6a3/
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.adruk.org/our-mission/our-impact/default-30feeac6a3/
 
Description Online engagement activities with service users 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Patients, carers and/or patient groups
Results and Impact Engagement with maternity service users about research questions. In return, providing support in understanding and using maternity statistics to inform decisions about care. This was done online as the pandemic ruled out the meetings of service users which we had used previouslyand reported in a recent publication.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020,2021,2022