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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Study sheds new light on C-sections

One-third of deliveries now involve operation

Rob Stein Washington Post

WASHINGTON – Federal health officials released some interesting data Monday aimed at trying to figure out why so many U.S. women are undergoing cesarean sections to deliver their babies.

The rate at which women are having C-sections has soared in recent years. About one-third of all babies are delivered using the surgical procedure. C-sections are necessary sometimes to save the baby or the mother or both. But experts think they’re being done far too frequently, putting both the woman and her baby at unnecessary risk, making the mother’s recovery a lot harder and adding a lot of extra costs to the nation’s health care bill.

In the new analysis, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, researchers at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development analyzed data collected at 19 hospitals about 228,668 births that occurred between 2002 and 2008.

Overall, the researches found that about a third of the deliveries were by C-section. Surprisingly, however, that was even the case for women giving birth for the first time. Slightly more than one-third of first-time moms had C-sections. Also surprising was the fact that half of the women attempting regular births had their labor induced. And half of C-sections occurred in women who had been induced but had not even dilated 6 centimeters. That suggests that doctors may be jumping the gun and turning to a C-section too early. It also might support the idea that some women and their doctors are scheduling their deliveries for convenience.

But it could be that a lot of these C-sections are needed because of problem pregnancies. More women are giving birth at older ages, when complications are more common. More obese women are also giving birth. Obese women are more prone to complications.

About one-third of the C-sections were among women who had had a previous C-section. And women who tried to have a vaginal birth after cesarean – or VBAC – succeeded only 57 percent of the time.

The researchers stress that the study can’t determine exactly how many of the C-sections were really unnecessary and could have been avoided. But the study does provide new evidence that more could be done to avoid women getting C-sections the first time around, and more could at least try a regular birth even if they have had a previous C-section.