Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

C-sec dominates delivery business

- Rhythma Kaul rhythma.kaul@htlive.com

Private hospitals in India are recording a quantum jump in caesarian or C-section deliveries, triggering fears of commercial exploitati­on of the surgery that the World Health Organizati­on recommends only for emergencie­s.

Union health minister JP Nadda said in the Lok Sabha on Friday that during 2016-17 one in two babies were delivered through the C-section in private hospitals that have signed up with the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS).

Of 31,296 deliveries since last year, 17,450 were C-section.

“The recent data reflect a grim trend. We know the numbers are high but it is a multi-factorial problem. We were looking at the global scenario and realised that the numbers are quite high in developed countries,” said Dinesh Chandra Joshi, the director of CGHS.

The figures don’t mirror the entire picture as many private hospitals are not bound contractua­lly with the scheme, which provides medical care to central government employees, pensioners and their dependents.

The available data put Chandigarh as the caesarian hotspot with 98.35% surgical deliveries in the past year. It is followed by Kanpur and Nagpur with 75.98% and 71.84% In the past decade, C-section deliveries in private hospitals spiraled from 27.7% in 2005-06 to 40.9% in 2015-16, the latstudy est National Family Health Survey (NFHS)-4 shows.

But government hospitals account for 11.9%, which is within the WHO guideline.

The WHO says C-sections should not be more than 10% to 15% of total deliveries and must be performed only in emergency cases. According to Joshi, the rich and affluent are said to prefer surgery as such deliveries can be planned and they save time and cut labour pain.

But “there is also a prominent commercial angle to the problem. It is more profitable to have a C-section done than to perform a normal delivery”, the CGHS director said.

Gynaecolog­ists in private hospitals denied turning C-section into a business. “I would say 20% of pregnant women requested for a surgery because they wanted the delivery to happen on a particular date and time,” said Anuradha Kapur, head of obstetrics and gynaecolog­y at Delhi’s Max Hospital.

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