The rising rate of cesarean births in the United States has been the focus of academic attention as well as attention from the media during the past decade. Although there is a consensus about the indications for cesarean delivery that have led to the increased rate (dystocia, malpresentation, fetal distress, and previous cesarean delivery), the influence of other key factors, such as whether the patient received care from a private physician or through a hospital clinic, has not been established. In a review of 65,647 deliveries in four Brooklyn hospitals between 1977 and 1982, we found that private physicians performed significantly more cesarean sections than house officers and attending physicians. Private patients giving birth to their first child were significantly more likely than clinic patients to undergo cesarean delivery if dystocia, malpresentation, or fetal distress was diagnosed, and private patients with one or more previous deliveries were significantly more likely to undergo cesarean delivery if dystocia or malpresentation was diagnosed. Private patients had fewer perinatal deaths, which were concentrated among infants with birth weights under 2000 g, but the infants of private patients had a significantly higher rate of low Apgar scores and birth injuries than the infants of clinic patients.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Abenhaim, H. A. MD MPH, Benjamin, A. MD, Koby, R. D. MD, Kinch, R. A. MD, Kramer, M. S. MD
(2007). Comparison of obstetric outcomes between on-call and patients' own obstetricians. CMAJ
177: 352-356
[Abstract][Full Text]
Mossialos, E., Allin, S., Karras, K., Davaki, K.
(2005). An investigation of Caesarean sections in three Greek hospitals: The impact of financial incentives and convenience. Eur J Public Health
15: 288-295
[Abstract][Full Text]
Potter, J. E, Berquo, E., Perpetuo, I. H O, Leal, O. F., Hopkins, K., Souza, M. R., Formiga, M. C. d. C.
(2001). Unwanted caesarean sections among public and private patients in Brazil: prospective study. BMJ
323: 1155-1158
[Abstract][Full Text]
Bland, E. S., Oppenheimer, L. W., Holmes, P., Wen, S. W.
(2001). The effect of income pooling within a call group on rates of obstetric intervention. CMAJ
164: 337-339
[Abstract][Full Text]
Aron, D. C., Harper, D. L., Shepardson, L. B., Rosenthal, G. E.
(1998). Impact of Risk-Adjusting Cesarean Delivery Rates When Reporting Hospital Performance. JAMA
279: 1968-1972
[Abstract][Full Text]
Hueston, W. J.
(1995). Site-to-Site Variation in the Factors Affecting Cesarean Section Rates. Arch Fam Med
4: 346-351
[Abstract]
Parrish, K. M., Holt, V. L., Easterling, T. R., Connell, F. A., LoGerfo, J. P.
(1994). Effect of Changes in Maternal Age, Parity, and Birth Weight Distribution on Primary Cesarean Delivery Rates. JAMA
271: 443-447
[Abstract]
Haas, J. S., Udvarhelyi, S., Epstein, A. M.
(1993). The Effect of Health Coverage for Uninsured Pregnant Women on Maternal Health and the Use of Cesarean Section. JAMA
270: 61-64
[Abstract]
Localio, A. R., Lawthers, A. G., Bengtson, J. M., Hebert, L. E., Weaver, S. L., Brennan, T. A., Landis, J. R.
(1993). Relationship Between Malpractice Claims and Cesarean Delivery. JAMA
269: 366-373
[Abstract]
Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs,
(1990). Black-White Disparities in Health Care. JAMA
263: 2344-2346
[Abstract]