Chart — Maternal-Newborn
Stages of Labor Comparison
A comprehensive side-by-side comparison of all four stages of labor — including latent and active phases within Stage 1 — with key events, cervical changes, contraction patterns, typical duration, and nursing focus for each stage.
Educational use only. Duration of labor varies by parity, analgesia, and individual patient factors. Values reflect general guidelines from ACOG/AWHONN. Always apply clinical judgment and follow provider orders. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Stages and Phases of Labor
| Stage / Phase | Key Events | Cervical Changes | Nursing Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
Stage 1 — Latent Nullip: up to 20 hrs |
| 0 → 6 cm dilation Effacement progresses Contractions q5–20 min, 30–45 sec |
|
Stage 1 — Active ≥1 cm/hr; median ~6 hrs (nullip) |
| 6 → 10 cm dilation Full effacement Contractions q2–5 min, 45–60 sec |
|
Stage 1 — Transition 30 min – 2 hrs |
| 8 → 10 cm dilation Full effacement Contractions q2–3 min, 60–90 sec |
|
Stage 2 Nullip: up to 3 hrs |
| 10 cm (complete) Fetal station descends Contractions q2–3 min, pushing effort |
|
Stage 3 5–30 min |
| Cervix fully dilated Uterus contracts post-delivery Oxytocin administered (AMTSL) |
|
Stage 4 (Recovery) First 1–2 hours postpartum |
| Fundus firm, midline, at umbilicus Lochia: rubra, moderate flow Cervix closing |
|
NCLEX Pearls
- Active labor begins at 6 cm (2014 ACOG redefinition) — not 4 cm as in older guidelines
- Normal active phase progress: ≥1 cm/hour dilation
- Placenta retained >30 minutes after delivery = obstetric emergency
- Fourth stage is highest-risk time for PPH — assess every 15 minutes × 4
- A boggy uterus in Stage 4 = uterine atony → massage until firm, administer oxytocin
- Transition phase is the most intense — urge to push may occur before complete dilation
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026This page is written to align with ACOG / AWHONN Labor Standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
