The delivery of one of every four infants by cesarean sectionin the United States during the late 1980s and early 1990s arousedconcern that many of these operations were unnecessary. Professionalorganizations established guidelines in an attempt to reducethe rate of cesarean section, with the goal being a rate of15 percent for cesarean deliveries by the year 2000. Currently,one third of the cesarean sections performed are elective operationsin women who have previously had cesarean sections, and thegoal for the year 2000 is far from being achieved.1,2 If thehigh rate of cesarean delivery is . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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Turner, M. J., McNally, O., Gardeil, F., Fruchter, O., Saad, A. H., Hale, R. W., McMahon, M. J., Luther, E. R., Bowes, W. A., Paul, R. H.
(1997). Trial of Labor Compared with an Elective Second Cesarean Section. NEJM
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