The Hamilton Spectator

Rate of C-sections almost doubled since 2000

- LINDA SEARING

Around the globe 21 per cent of babies, or nearly 30 million, are delivered by Caesarean section, according to research from 169 countries published in the Lancet.

That figure, from 2015, represents a near doubling of Csection births worldwide since 2000, when there were 16 million such deliveries, or 12 per cent of live births.

Childbirth experts say Csections would account for 10 to 15 per cent of the babies delivered if they were done only because of complicati­ons.

But in 106 of the 169 countries, C-section rates were “well above what is expected on the basis of obstetric indication­s.”

In 15 countries, the procedure accounted for more than 40 per cent of births.

The research noted that C-sections tended to be underused in poor countries and overused in higher-income countries.

In North America, the rate of C-section births increased from 24 per cent to 32 per cent in the 15-year span, according to the new research. In the United States, the lowest rate was in New Mexico (18 per cent) and the highest in New Jersey (33 per cent).

Medical groups generally urge a C-section when it is medically necessary because of the mother’s health problems, threats to the baby’s health, a multiple birth or the large size or abnormal position of the baby.

A C-section delivery is generally safe for both mother and baby. But it does come with some risk because it involves incisions in the woman’s abdomen and uterus. Babies born by C-section sometimes have breathing problems for a few days after birth.

Women who have a C-section have an increased risk for complicati­ons in future pregnancie­s, including problems related to the placenta and heavy bleeding.

Having a C-section, however, does not rule out having a vaginal birth in the future.

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