Master labor stages, Friedman vs Zhang curves, WHO partograph, AMTSL, episiotomy and India JSY/LaQshya policies for NEET PG 2026 OBG MCQs.

Labor and partograph are reliably tested OBG topics for NEET PG. Lock these:
Labor is a core NEET PG OBG topic that overlaps with PSM (JSY/JSSK/LaQshya/MMR) and Paediatrics (delayed cord clamping, neonatal resuscitation). The biggest examiner-favoured shift in the last decade is away from Friedman and toward the Zhang/WHO active-phase-at-6 cm model — this single change reduces the diagnosis of "failure to progress" and unnecessary primary caesareans.
This NEETPGAI deep dive covers true labor definition, the three (or four) stages, Friedman vs Zhang curves, the WHO 2018 partograph (Labour Care Guide), management of the second and third stages including AMTSL, the restrictive episiotomy policy, and the Indian programmatic context (JSY, JSSK, LaQshya, MMR). Pair this with the contraception methods and counselling guide for the full OBG examiner stack.
True labor is regular, painful, progressively stronger uterine contractions producing cervical effacement and dilation with descent of the presenting part. Distinguish from false labor (Braxton-Hicks) — irregular contractions, no cervical change.
Onset of labor: contractions every 5 to 10 minutes lasting 30 to 45 seconds with cervical change (effacement and ≥ 1 cm dilation).
| Stage | From | To | Nullipara duration | Multipara duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (latent) | Labor onset | 5 to 6 cm | Up to 20 h | Up to 14 h |
| 1 (active) | 5 to 6 cm | 10 cm | 4 to 6 h | 2 to 4 h |
| 2 | Full dilation | Delivery of baby | Up to 3 h (with epidural; up to 4 h) | Up to 2 h (with epidural; up to 3 h) |
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Join on Telegram →| 3 | Delivery of baby | Delivery of placenta | 5 to 30 min | 5 to 30 min |
| 4 (some references) | Placental delivery | 1 h postpartum | 1 h close monitoring | 1 h close monitoring |
Clinical implication — ACOG/SMFM (2014) and WHO recommend that active-phase labor arrest should NOT be diagnosed before 6 cm dilation. This has reduced unnecessary primary caesareans.
The WHO 2018 Labour Care Guide replaces the classical partograph for global use.
| Variable | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Fetal heart rate | Every 15-30 min in first stage; every 5 min in second stage |
| Liquor (colour, blood, meconium) | Each examination |
| Caput and moulding | Each PV examination |
| Cervical dilation | Every 4 h (Stage 1) |
| Descent of head (fifths palpable abdominally) | Every 4 h |
| Contractions per 10 min and duration | Every 30 min |
| Oxytocin / medications | Each administration |
| Maternal pulse, BP, temperature, urine | Per protocol |
This realigns the document with the Zhang curve and reduces unnecessary augmentation.
| Parity | Without epidural | With epidural |
|---|---|---|
| Nullipara | 3 h | 4 h |
| Multipara | 2 h | 3 h |
Beyond these — consider instrumental or caesarean delivery.
Active management of the third stage of labor is the WHO-recommended evidence-based approach for ALL deliveries. It reduces postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) risk by 60 to 70 percent.
1 to 3 minutes post-delivery (or until pulsation ceases). Improves neonatal iron stores, reduces anaemia in infancy, reduces need for blood transfusion in preterms. Universal recommendation now.
True labor is defined by regular, painful, progressively stronger uterine contractions accompanied by cervical effacement and dilation, with descent of the presenting part. The three stages are — Stage 1 (onset of labor to full dilation 10 cm), subdivided into a latent phase (cervix < 6 cm) and active phase (6 to 10 cm). Stage 2 (full dilation to delivery of the baby). Stage 3 (delivery of the baby to delivery of the placenta and membranes). Some references include Stage 4 (1 hour post-placental delivery, focused on monitoring for haemorrhage).
The WHO 2018 partograph (Labour Care Guide) is the updated graphical tool for tracking labor progress, fetal wellbeing, and maternal status. Key changes from earlier versions — the alert and action lines have been removed in favour of an individualised cervical dilation reference; active phase is now defined from 5 to 6 cm (not 4 cm); friendly-format documentation of contractions, fetal heart rate, descent of head in fifths palpable abdominally, liquor colour, caput/moulding, maternal vital signs, and oxytocin/medications. The aim is to reduce unnecessary intervention and improve respectful care.
Active management of the third stage of labor reduces postpartum haemorrhage risk by 60 to 70 percent. The three components per WHO are — (1) administration of a prophylactic uterotonic within 1 minute of delivery (oxytocin 10 IU IM is first-line; carbetocin 100 micrograms in heat-stable formulation increasingly used in India); (2) controlled cord traction with counter-traction on the uterus (Brandt-Andrews); (3) uterine massage after placental delivery. Routine cord clamping is now delayed by 1 to 3 minutes to improve neonatal iron stores.
Friedman (1954) defined the classic labor curve with active phase starting at 4 cm and a minimum dilation rate of 1.2 cm/hour in nulliparas (1.5 cm/hour in multiparas). Zhang (2010, modern population) showed that contemporary labor is slower — active phase begins at 6 cm, and dilation from 4 to 6 cm can take 6+ hours without being abnormal. Zhang's curve underpins the ACOG/WHO recommendation that active-phase labor arrest should not be diagnosed before 6 cm dilation. This has reduced unnecessary primary caesarean rates.
JSY (Janani Suraksha Yojana, 2005) is a conditional cash-transfer scheme incentivising institutional delivery — pregnant women receive Rs 1,400 (rural) or Rs 1,000 (urban) on delivering at a public facility. JSSK (Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram, 2011) provides free delivery, drugs, diet, transport, and referral. LaQshya (Labour Room Quality Improvement Initiative, 2017) certifies labour rooms and obstetric OTs to deliver respectful, evidence-based intrapartum care — 'labour room ki guarantee'. Together they have driven India's institutional delivery rate from 39 percent (NFHS-3, 2005-6) to 89 percent (NFHS-5, 2019-21).
This content is for educational purposes for NEET PG exam preparation. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Clinical information has been reviewed by qualified medical professionals.
Written by: NEETPGAI Editorial Team Reviewed by: Pending SME Review Last reviewed: May 2026