Bishop Score for Vaginal Delivery and Induction of Labor
Why Use
Predicting which women will successfully deliver with induction is difficult, and the Bishop Score is a standardized system used for evaluation.
When to Use
Patients being evaluated for labor (including possible induction).
Formula
Pearls / Pitfalls
The Bishop Score for Vaginal Delivery and Induction of Pregnancy was originally developed to predict failure of elective induction in multiparous women. It is commonly considered for predicting the need for caesarean section after induction and preterm labor. Some centers recommend using the Modified Bishop Score which was developed in 1982 as an update to Bishop's original 1964 scoring system. The scoring system was developed prior to cervical ripening agents. Typically a score ≥ 8 is used to predict spontaneous vaginal delivery without induction and a score ≤5 suggests an unfavorable cervix likely to require induction.
Advice
Induction is often considered at a Bishop Score of ≤5.
More Information
Score interpretation: Scores ≤ 5 suggest an unfavorable cervix, and that induction may be necessary for successful vaginal delivery. Scores 6-7 do not definitively predict whether or not induction will be successful. Consider induction or augmentation of labor based on clinical judgment. Scores ≥ 8 suggest spontaneous vaginal delivery is more likely and augmentation or induction may be unnecessary.