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elvispupy
08-24-2005, 12:30 PM
Battle lines drawn over C-sections (http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2005-08-23-csection-battle_x.htm)

Battle lines drawn over C-sections
By Rita Rubin, USA TODAY
For some women, birth has become the latest battleground for reproductive rights.

At a growing number of hospitals, women are being forced to schedule a repeat cesarean section just because they already had one. Doctors and hospitals say they fear lawsuits if they allow a patient to attempt a vaginal birth after a C-section — called a VBAC — and something goes awry.

"We think the risk is more of a legal risk than a medical risk," acknowledges Bob Wentz, CEO of California's Oroville Hospital, which banned VBACs two years ago.

As the overall C-section rate in the USA continues to climb, so will the proportion of pregnant women who have already had one. C-sections hit an all-time high of 27.6% in 2003, the most recent year for which information is available.

Though VBACs practically were unheard of before the 1980s, the overall C-section rate was so low that relatively few women cared. But today, some pregnant women regard VBAC bans as an intolerable attack on personal autonomy. They view VBACs' risks — mainly, the chance that the uterine scar from their previous C-section will tear — as a reasonable trade-off for the chance to experience a vaginal birth and avoid abdominal surgery, which carries its own risks.

"My uterus, my choice," read one placard at a rally in late July at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma, Wash. On Aug. 1, the hospital began requiring that all pregnant women who had had a C-section schedule a repeat cesarean for their next delivery.

In large chunks of the USA, no hospital or doctor will allow women to attempt a VBAC:

• In Flagstaff, Ariz., an obstetrician/gynecologist says she was reprimanded by her colleagues for arranging to do what her own patients could not: have a VBAC at her own hospital.

• In North Platte, Neb., a mother of five delivered baby No. 6 at home after the local hospital suggested that because she had had one C-section, she temporarily relocate to Denver or Omaha — each nearly 300 miles away — if she wanted to deliver vaginally.

• In Oklahoma, most OB/GYNs won't allow patients to attempt a VBAC because their malpractice insurance no longer will cover claims resulting from such births.

The VBAC rate peaked at 28.3% in 1996. By 2003, it had dropped to 10.6%, less than a third of the 37% goal set by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Healthy People 2010 report. The report viewed unnecessary C-sections as a heavy toll on pregnant women and health care resources.

More recent data are not yet available, but all signs indicate that the VBAC rate has slid into the single digits. In other words, more than 90% of pregnant women who have had a C-section will have another. "I think VBAC is dead," says Gary Hankins, chairman of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists' committee on obstetrics practice.

Small change, big effect

If that's the case, hospital CEO Wentz and many of his colleagues would cite Hankins' organization as the cause of death. In 1999, a one-word change in the obstetricians group's guidelines spurred community hospitals to begin prohibiting VBACs.

Previously, the group had recommended that only hospitals with a "readily available" surgical team — interpreted as no more than a half-hour drive away — allow VBACs. The revised guidelines call for an "immediately available" surgical team in case a uterine rupture necessitates an emergency C-section.

Many hospitals have interpreted that to mean they must have an anesthesiologist and operating room standing by whenever a patient attempts a VBAC, a luxury they say they can't afford. If they can't meet the guidelines, they argue, they're opening themselves up to lawsuits should mother or baby be injured during a VBAC attempt.

The contractions of normal labor can cause a C-section scar to rupture. At worst, uterine ruptures lead to blood transfusions or a hysterectomy and possibly fatal brain damage in the baby. But such catastrophes are uncommon.

In the most definitive study, published in December in The New England Journal of Medicine, about 75% of 18,000 women who attempted a VBAC were successful. The National Institutes of Health study found that ruptures occurred in fewer than 1% — or 124 — of those who tried to have a VBAC.

In most cases, mother and baby did fine. Of the babies born to the VBAC group, there were 12 cases of brain damage that appeared to have resulted from a lack of oxygen caused by maternal complications, such as a rupture. Seven of the 12, two of them fatal to the babies, were linked to uterine rupture.

The VBAC rupture complication rate may seem quite low, says Hankins, chief of obstetrics and maternal-fetal medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, but "it's damn high if you're the one."

Only about 1 in 5 of his patients who have had a C-section opt to try for a VBAC, Hankins says, adding, "I truly believe in letting the women have the choice."

Increasingly, though, only women who deliver at large teaching hospitals can choose a VBAC.

In Oklahoma, women who want a hospital VBAC must go to academic medical centers in Oklahoma City or Tulsa, says Carl Hook, CEO of the state's Physicians Liability and Insurance Co. One reason: On Jan. 1, the company stopped covering claims arising from VBACs because of large awards in suits related to such births, Hook says.

The insurer covers about 75% of Oklahoma doctors who deliver babies, Hook says. "The vast majority of our obstetrician physicians, they were pleased" with the decision to drop VBAC coverage.

Mark Landon, the Ohio State University OB/GYN who led the National Institutes of Health study on VBACs, isn't surprised. "There is a group of obstetricians who probably are just as happy not to offer this service inasmuch as it simplifies things for them. There is no doubt that conducting a VBAC is clearly more labor-intensive than doing another C-section."

Even doctors at large urban medical centers are getting nervous. In Columbus, Ohio, a group of about 60 self-insured OB/GYNs is considering getting out of the VBAC business because of liability concerns, says Tammy Backenstoe, executive director of risk services for MaternOhio Management Services, which manages their practices.

"We've got some practices, if you have a patient who wants a VBAC, each partner in the practice has to sign off before they'll do it," she says.

If any patient could be fully informed about VBAC's risks, one would think Beth Claxton would be. After all, Claxton is a board-certified OB/GYN in Flagstaff.

Her firstborn was breech, or not in the optimal head-down position for delivery. Few doctors will deliver a breech baby vaginally, so Claxton tried everything to get her daughter to flip in utero.

"I thought the recovery would have been faster with a vaginal birth," she explains. "I also wanted to experience natural childbirth."

But the baby wouldn't budge, so Claxton delivered Eliza via a planned C-section in August 2003.

When she became pregnant again, Claxton assumed she would have to schedule a C-section. Although Flagstaff Medical Center didn't have a formal VBAC policy, she says, anesthesiologists refused to stand by while women attempting one were in labor. Flagstaff residents who wanted a VBAC had to drive two hours to Phoenix or Page.

But at her first prenatal visit, her OB/GYN asked whether she wanted a VBAC.

"I was dumbfounded," recalls Claxton, 38. "I said, 'Sure.' "

According to obstetricians groups' guidelines, Claxton was an excellent VBAC candidate: She had only one previous C-section, and it was for a reason unlikely to recur. Plus, her uterine scar was low and horizontal, less likely to rupture than a vertical scar.

Her OB, an anesthesiologist friend and a labor-and-delivery nurse all agreed to meet Claxton at the hospital whenever she arrived in labor. Claxton delivered Meg vaginally on April 16.

On July 8, she received a "letter of concern for failing to comply with the hospital and departmental guidelines regarding an elective VBAC." It came from the hospital's medical executive committee, Claxton says; her OB and anesthesiologist received similar letters.

Copies of the letters were placed in their credentialing files at the hospital, Claxton says. She's not sure what, if any, effect they'll have.

The hospital's Janet Dean says the medical staff leadership frowned upon a physician arranging to do what her own patients could not. "For approximately the past three years, we had had a working understanding between the hospital and our medical staff that the hospital did not provide elective VBAC," Dean says. "The decision not to offer elective VBACs needs to be applied equally to all expectant mothers."

Because few pregnant women have the kind of connections Claxton has, VBAC bans are driving some of them to labor at home, arriving at the hospital only when they are about to deliver and hoping it is too late to have a C-section.

"Some women think they can show up in active labor and just refuse" a C-section, says San Diego resident Tonya Jamois, president of the International Cesarean Awareness Network, a pro-VBAC group. "It's hard to be Rosa Parks when your contractions are just two minutes apart."

And some women, such as Barbara Roebuck, never bother going to the hospital. Roebuck, 37, delivered four babies vaginally before requiring a C-section for her fifth, who was breech. Pregnant with her sixth, she says she saw four doctors in a futile search for one who would let her try a VBAC.

"Every one of them said: 'Hospital policy. You don't have a choice,' " Roebuck recalls.

"Oh, yeah?" she replied. "If I don't need one, I'm not having one. You want me to recover from major surgery while taking care of an infant or toddlers?"

Her own solution

A letter to Roebuck May 27 from Cindy Bradley, CEO of Great Plains Regional Medical Center in North Platte, explained that the hospital has banned VBACs since 2002 because it cannot ensure immediate surgical support recommended by the obstetricians' group. Failure to meet those guidelines makes the hospital vulnerable to rupture-related lawsuits, Bradley wrote.

She suggested that Roebuck schedule a C-section or temporarily relocate to a town with a hospital that meets those guidelines. In an interview, Bradley said that the closest hospitals that allow VBACs are in Omaha and Denver, each about 280 miles away.

Moving four hours from her family was out of the question, Roebuck says. So was scheduling a C-section. So, on June 29, Roebuck delivered 9-pound, 13-ounce Shane at home with only friends and family in attendance.

The thought of laboring or delivering at home after a C-section, without electronic fetal monitoring and an operating room close by in case of a uterine rupture, sends chills down Bruce Flamm's spine.

"It sounds like it is kind of spreading, which is just a disaster," says Flamm, a Kaiser Permanente OB/GYN in Riverside, Calif., who has written extensively about VBACs.

Roebuck was lucky; her home VBAC went smoothly, Flamm says. But it's only a matter of time before one goes wrong and a baby dies because a C-section could not be performed quickly enough, he says.

Flamm urges women to "search for the middle ground. Talk to the doctor, see if they would just be willing to stick around the hospital that one day they're in labor."

"Unfortunately," Flamm says, "nobody wants to do the middle ground."




Storm Bride
08-24-2005, 12:52 PM
Flamm urges women to "search for the middle ground. Talk to the doctor, see if they would just be willing to stick around the hospital that one day they're in labor."

"Unfortunately," Flamm says, "nobody wants to do the middle ground."
Right - is this guy living in a cave? Women are talking to lots and lots of doctors. How many appointments does he think it's reasonable for a pregnant woman (with children at home!) to have to make to try to find someone who'll support her? That's not "middle ground" - it's totally unreasonable expectations of the pregnant woman.

And, I don't like his attitude about it just being matter of time until a disaster occurs. It might be a reasonable stance to take if you consider a c-section to be acceptable...wonder why doctors can't understand that pregnant women with small children aren't all that excited about the opportunity to have needles stuck in their spines and be cut wide open...

crunchymomof2
08-24-2005, 03:00 PM
All i have to say about that guy is GRRR.... cause if I say more it will be :cuss

wasabi
08-24-2005, 03:10 PM
"We think the risk is more of a legal risk than a medical risk," acknowledges Bob Wentz, CEO of California's Oroville Hospital, which banned VBACs two years ago.

Isn't that lovely? :irked: I'm at least glad that they're admitting it and that overall the article seems to present VBAC as something that is safe. I also see it is not illegal in OK as someone on a mainstream board recently posted.

wasabi
08-24-2005, 03:12 PM
And, I don't like his attitude about it just being matter of time until a disaster occurs.
I think he was referring to unattended homebirths like the woman mentioned above rather than talking about VBAC in general.

Storm Bride
08-24-2005, 03:21 PM
I think so, too. But, it still has the overtone of "if you have the baby at the hospital, everything will be perfectly okay - everything else is way too dangerous". At the moment, I'm dealing with an incision that still hasn't healed - surgery was on July 26th. I've had an infection, more pain than either of my previous sections, and I've lost sensation in my bladder.

So glad I was bullied into a "safe" c-section. :irked:

wasabi
08-24-2005, 03:25 PM
Oh how awful. :hug I feel greatful all the time that I somehow managed to escape a section with my first since I was very close to one for FTP and I'm sure the next three would have been repeats because they were too big. I'd have never known my body handles birth just fine.

Storm Bride
08-24-2005, 04:39 PM
The weirdest thing about this one is that my initial recovery (first few days in the hospital) was by far the best of my three sections). But, the incision just hasn't healed properly - because of the infection or vice versa? - and it's just taking forever.

I'm slowly (very slowly) coming to terms with this, but it really pushes my buttons to see some guy who's never going to have to look after little ones right after surgery spouting off about disasters occurring. I wonder if he'd like to come to my house and explain the "good outcome" to my 2-year-old dd, who has spent the last few weeks crying "I want you mommy - pick me up mommy", etc., etc.

Sorry - going OT...as I said, he just really pushed my buttons.

Sagesgirl
08-25-2005, 03:03 AM
Well, we should write them. ;) It's fairly easy to send a letter-to-the-editor from their website. Here's the link, in fact:
http://asp.usatoday.com/marketing/feedback/feedback-online.aspx?type=18

My main issues with the article:
1) No mention of how our 27% c-section rate is nearly 3 times the WHO's goal for the surgery
2) No mention of how many of those c-sections are unnecessary

And of course I hated treating UBAC like Russian roulette, but I'm used to that.

Mom2baldie
08-25-2005, 05:07 PM
This entire article infuriates me.

A previous poster mentioned something about this comment by Flamm - Flamm urges women to "search for the middle ground. Talk to the doctor, see if they would just be willing to stick around the hospital that one day they're in labor." "Unfortunately," Flamm says, "nobody wants to do the middle ground." that I wanted to add to...

I do not think that we should have to search for the middle ground! If I am having a normal, low risk pregnancy I should NOT have to compromise with a DOCTOR about what kind of birth I am going to have. It is MY body, MY decision.

I also completely agreed with this:
"Some women think they can show up in active labor and just refuse" a C-section, says San Diego resident Tonya Jamois, president of the International Cesarean Awareness Network, a pro-VBAC group. "It's hard to be Rosa Parks when your contractions are just two minutes apart."

I can not stand when people say that it is the mothers fault for "allowing" interventions to happen to them when they are in active labor/pushing - they should have "just said no." How arrogant and self-righteous! And the sad thing is that you see it here on the MDC Birth and Beyond boards all the time. I wonder what they expect a person to do?!

The whole situation is completely disgusting.

All this coming from a fellow csec/vbac mama... :nut

richella
08-25-2005, 10:59 PM
I can not stand when people say that it is the mothers fault for "allowing" interventions to happen to them when they are in active labor/pushing - they should have "just said no." How arrogant and self-righteous! And the sad thing is that you see it here on the MDC Birth and Beyond boards all the time. I wonder what they expect a person to do?!


Thanks for saying that! I don't come to this page often cause I've only had one and don't know if I'll have another, but there are definitely a few people on MDC who are judgemental about this issue. And I'm still working through my feelings about it all, so I don't need attitude from other people.

When I was pg I talked about the vbac issue with my md and a midwife, but for some reason I just didn't think it would ever be an issue I'd need to face. Maybe I just couldn't think that far into the future.