CDC: C-sections are on the rise among women who have already had one
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Posted 7:31PM on Thursday, November 7, 2002
ATLANTA - A government effort to reduce the rate of Caesarean births appears headed for failure, federal officials reported Thursday. <br>
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A California study found that the percentage of mothers who had had a child by Caesarean section and opted to repeat the procedure for subsequent children increased during the second half of the 1990s, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. <br>
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That is a reversal of the trend from the 1980s and early '90s. <br>
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Nearly a quarter of all deliveries in the country are by C-section. The United States is trying to reduce that to about 15 percent. Since 2000, the government has been promoting vaginal births, contending they carry a lower risk of medical complications for mothers. <br>
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But the California study casts doubt on whether the government can reach its goal. The CDC found that the percentage of women who chose a vaginal birth after having their previous child by C-section dropped from 23 percent to 15 percent between 1996 and 2000. <br>
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The CDC said the study supports other research indicating the same thing is happening nationwide. <br>
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California, which accounts for one-eighth of all births in the United States, will probably not meet the government health goals on Caesarean sections, the CDC said. <br>
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``California has the largest population of births in the country, so whatever happens here will be seen nationally,'' said the CDC's Dr. Sharon Durousseau. <br>
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The government has set a goal for 2010 of 37 percent of women having vaginal births after having Caesareans. The U.S. rate now is 22 percent. <br>
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The government cited medical and legal pressures for the increase in C-sections among these women. <br>
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Similarly, doctors said Caesarean sections are on the rise because it is convenient for health providers and patients to schedule births; because of the risk of lawsuits if something goes wrong with the baby; and because the stresses of labor can cause bladder problems in the mother. <br>
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Many obstetricians have long believed that once a woman gave birth by C-section, all subsequent deliveries would have to be done that way, too, because of the risk that the scarred uterus could rupture during labor if the mother attempted a vaginal birth. But in the 1990s, government experts concluded that many of these women could safely deliver vaginally. <br>
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Dr. Curtis Lowery, director of the maternal-fetal medicine division of the obstetrics and gynecology department of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, said almost none of hospitals in Arkansas are performing vaginal births after Caesareans. <br>
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C-sections are ``not an effective spending of health care resources,'' Lowery said. ``What will happen as the result of multiple abdominal surgeries on patients?'' <br>
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Federal officials said better education campaigns for women and health-care providers on the risks and benefits of vaginal births are needed.