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Are Routine birth
interventions safe?

Maternity Care Analysis
Finds Danger of Routine Birth Interventions
WASHINGTON (March 8, 2007)-Findings from a two-year review of the
science behind maternity care indicate that the common and costly
use of many routine birth interventions, such as continuous
electronic fetal monitoring, labor induction for low-risk women and
cesarean surgery, fail to improve health outcomes for mothers and
their babies and may cause harm.
The review entitled, the Evidence Basis for the Ten Steps to
Mother-Friendly Care, will be published in The Journal of Perinatal
Education and the results will be premiered at the Coalition for
Improving Maternity Services (CIMS) Forum today.
Research findings include:
* Women whose labors are induced for non-medical reasons are more
likely to suffer from intrapartum fever and more likely to end up
needing forceps, vacuum extraction and a cesarean surgery.
* Inductions add to the risk of poor outcomes for the health of the
baby. Artificially-induced labors increase the rate of fetal
distress and a serious complication of labor called shoulder
dystocia (when the baby's shoulders have difficulty passing through
the mother's pelvic bones). Elective induction babies are also more
likely to need phototherapy to treat jaundice after birth, and are
at higher risk for breathing difficulties and admission to neonatal
intensive care.
* Use of electronic fetal monitors is more than 85 percent on
low-risk women. They fail to reduce the number of perinatal deaths,
the incidence of cerebral palsy or the number of admissions to the
neonatal intensive care unit. Continuous fetal monitoring puts women
at increased risk for an instrumental delivery, cesarean section and
infection.
* Overall 1 in 3 U.S. women give birth by cesarean surgery. The
majority of the operations are repeat procedures with no medical
indication.
* When compared to women who have a vaginal birth, cesarean
surgeries put women at risk for infections, hemorrhage requiring
transfusion, surgical injuries, and complications from anesthesia,
chronic pain, adhesions, hysterectomy, pulmonary embolism, placental
problems with future pregnancies and death. Babies born by cesarean
surgery are more likely to suffer from surgical lacerations,
respiratory complications, and to require neonatal intensive care.
There are more than 4.1 million U.S. births a year with a cesarean
surgery rate more than 30 percent. The health and economic impact of
high tech birth is significant. In 2004, hospital costs for
deliveries were more than $30 billion. The record high cesarean
surgery rate contradicts the national goals of Healthy People 2010
to reduce cesarean surgeries for first time mothers to 15 percent
and to increase VBAC (Vaginal Birth After Cesarean) rates to 63
percent. The research also found that harm is caused by routine use
of intravenous fluids (IVs), amniotomy (breaking the bag of waters),
withholding food and water from women in labor and episiotomy.
The Journal of Perinatal Education is the leading peer-reviewed
journal for childbirth educators. The Journal is published quarterly
by Lamaze International for readers who provide parent education in
the areas of childbirth, pregnancy, breastfeeding, neonatal care,
postpartum, early parenting and young family development. For more
information about The Journal of Perinatal Education and Lamaze
International, visit www.lamaze.org.
http://www.lamaze.org/
Contact: Kara Dress; 202-367-2434; marketing@lamaze.org
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