Final push for new device to prevent birth trauma

Final push for new device to prevent birth trauma

This simple device has the potential to address a common, yet potentially avoidable, complication

Andrew Weeks

BirthGlide: Innovative Device to Reduce Complications in Labour

The BirthGlide team is developing a novel, simple-to-use device to reduce complications in the second stage of labour and the use of traumatic procedures. It works by reducing resistance between the baby’s head and the birth canal. BirthGlide is a patent-protected device and could be used in the majority of the global 134 million births/year.

Professor Weeks, Professor of International Maternal Health at the University of Liverpool has worked alongside the BirthGlide team to secure £1.5m from the NIHR i4i Product Development Awards. This will fund the first-in-human feasibility study of the device. Andrew Weeks, said: “This simple device has the potential to address a common, yet potentially avoidable, complication. We will be offering the device to 22 women in labour at Liverpool Women’s Hospital this summer to see how acceptable it is, how easy it is to place correctly in the birth canal and whether it helps the baby to deliver. We hope that, if it is both acceptable and does actually help the baby to come through the birth canal, then we will move on to a much larger study to see how much it helps and whether it is cost-effective for the NHS to offer to every woman giving birth.”

The NIHR Invention for Innovation (i4i) Programme is a translational research funding scheme aimed at medical devices, in vitro diagnostic devices and digital health technologies addressing an existing or emerging health or social care need.

Source: University of Liverpool

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