LA Times–Childbirth: Can the U.S. improve?

Once reserved for cases in which the life of the baby or mother was in danger, the cesarean is now routine. The most common operation in the U.S., it is performed in 31% of births, up from 4.5% in 1965.

With that surge has come an explosion in medical bills, an increase in complications — and a reconsideration of the cesarean as a sometimes unnecessary risk.

It is a big reason childbirth often is held up in healthcare reform debates as an example of how the intensive and expensive U.S. brand of medicine has failed to deliver better results and may, in fact, be doing more harm than good.

“We’re going in the wrong direction,” said Dr. Roger A. Rosenblatt, a University of Washington professor of family medicine who has written about what he calls the “perinatal paradox,” in which more intervention, such as cesareans, is linked with declining outcomes, such as neonatal intensive care admissions. Maternity care, he said, “is a microcosm of the entire medical enterprise.”

Read it all.

print

Posted in * Culture-Watch, Children, Health & Medicine, Marriage & Family

One comment on “LA Times–Childbirth: Can the U.S. improve?

  1. Sidney says:

    Is the risk of lawsuit a factor in whether hospitals decide to do vaginal or casarean?

    Somehow I suspect that a jury is more likely to believe the hospital was at fault if a vaginal birth was attempted.