Hospital News

2006 Press Releases

Reprinted with permission, Courtesy, Asbury Park Press, a Gannett Co. newspaper.
BY SHANNON MULLEN
ASBURY PARK PRESS STAFF WRITER

Caesareans Rising
C-section Rates Have Been Steadily Increasing — and There's No Change In Sight.

LONG BRANCH, NJ, January 17, 2006 - Are C-sections moving from Plan B to Plan A?

It's a question many health professionals in the baby delivery business are wrestling with these days as the rate of Caesarean deliveries continues to climb.

Nationwide, C-sections accounted for 29.1 percent of deliveries in 2004, the highest rate ever reported, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control. The trend represents a sea change in the course of a generation: In 1970, the Caesarean rate was 5.5 percent.

New Jersey's rate, which perennially leads the nation, was more than one out of every three deliveries. In 2004, the C-section rate among hospitals in Ocean and Monmouth counties ranged from 17.8 percent to 42.7 percent, according to the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services.

Because of the legal, economic and societal forces driving the C-section trend, few expect the rates to level off anytime soon.

"We could see a 50 percent Caesarean rate in our lifetime," predicted Dr. Eric Lehnes, chairman of the OB-GYN department at Kimball Medical Center in Lakewood. The hospital's 2004 C-section rate was 17.8 percent, the lowest in the state, in part because of the strong cultural preference for vaginal births among Orthodox Jewish families in Lakewood.

Perfection and preference

Health experts cite two major reasons for the upswing in C-sections.

The first is doctors' fears of being sued for a problematic delivery — a particular concern in a litigious state like New Jersey, where many obstetricians pay $100,000 or more per year for malpractice insurance.

"The standard you're held to is 100 percent perfection," said Dr. Robert Graebe, chairman of the OB-GYN department at Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch, whose 2004 C-section rate was 28.8 percent, the lowest in Monmouth County. Graebe's medical group recently instituted a 24-hour rotation of doctors who take turns serving in the hospital as an on-site "laborist," a strategy aimed at reducing the incidence of avoidable Caesarean sections, he said.

A second reason for the rising rates is a growing preference for C-sections among expectant mothers. Some busy women elect to have a C-section not for any medical reasons but rather because they want the convenience and predictability of a scheduled delivery. Others are willing to endure weeks of recovery from a C-section surgery, which involves cutting through several layers of abdominal tissue, rather than subject themselves to the rigors of labor and the physical toll of a vaginal delivery.

A related factor, health experts say, is that more women today are well into their 30s by the time they deliver their first child. These older moms are more prone to such complications as high blood pressure that can trigger an emergency C-section.

In addition, some older women who have to go to great lengths to get pregnant in the first place view a scheduled C-section as a way to reduce the odds of something going wrong during delivery.

"It's major surgery"

Yet some health experts see the rising number of C-sections as a worrisome trend.

"It's major surgery," said Lehnes of Kimball Medical Center.

Compared to vaginal births, C-sections carry a greater risk of infection, blood clots, stroke and damage to the bowel or bladder. Scarring from one or more C-sections also can result in uterine rupture later on and can complicate future deliveries. The risk of maternal death also is greater with C-sections, according to a report in 2003 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

C-sections also cost more than standard deliveries: $11,524 for a C-section with no complications compared to $6,239 for a vaginal birth with no complications, according to 2003 hospital data from the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

For her part, Dr. Debra Gussman, an obstetrician on the faculty of Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, isn't convinced that the prevalance of C-sections is a cause for concern.

Though a C-section may pose more risks, doctors have become highly proficient in the procedure, and the overall outcomes for mothers and babies are excellent, Gussman said. As for the C-section rates themselves, she doesn't believe consumers are much interested in where a certain hospital falls in the rankings. Jersey Shore's C-section rate in 2004 was 35.6 percent, above the state average.

"People don't choose a hospital, they choose a doctor," Gussman said. "I don't think these numbers are very helpful at all."

By the time she was a young woman, Chrisie Stankowitz had listened to enough nightmarish stories of terrible labor experiences to convince her that a Caesarean section was the way to go.

As she got older, though, she realized these were worst-case scenarios, so that when she got pregnant with her first child, her preference had switched to a vaginal birth.

In the end, Stankowitz didn't have a choice. Because her baby was breeched and also because she fell down steps near the end of her term, her doctor performed an emergency C-section. Her son, Mattingly, was delivered in perfect health two months ago at Monmouth Medical Center.

"The outcome was great and it was quick," said Stankowitz, 32, of Tinton Falls.

Stankowitz said she recently attended a baby shower where Caesarean sections became a major topic of conversation. She can see the advantages of both means of delivery.

"I think women should have a choice," she said.

"Old-fashioned" deliveries common at Kimball Medical Center.

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