NorthBay Medical Center surpasses statewide target aimed at reducing births via c-section
NorthBay Medical Center is one of 124 hospitals that met or surpassed a statewide target aimed at reducing births via cesarean sections in first-time mothers with low-risk pregnancies.
California Health and Human Services, along with Cal Hospital Compare, released the 2021 Maternity Honor Roll list, noting that this year’s award reflects hospital discharge and birth certificate data from 208 California hospitals in 2020 that offer maternity services and participated in the California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative (CMQCC)’s Maternal Data Center.
“At NorthBay, we consider it an honor to provide the highest quality of care for our smallest patients and their families,” Wayne Gietz, president of NorthBay Healthcare Group, said in a press statement. “Receiving this recognition is a testament to our caregivers and their commitment to providing the most compassionate care and advanced medicine, close to home for new mothers and their babies.”
Katie Lydon, senior director of Women & Children’s Services, is proud of her team’s latest accomplishment, noting the department has actively focused on decreasing the number of C-sections for first-time moms since 2017.
“The team always puts the patient first, and that has led to our organization earning a Baby Friendly designation, this Cal Hospital Compare award and more,” Lydon said in the statement. “We work hard to make NorthBay a great place to have a baby with every patient, every encounter, every time.”
All hospitals on the 2021 Maternity Honor Roll demonstrate that collaborative action can lead to positive change, noted Mark Ghaly, state Health and Human Services Agency secretary.
“Improving the quality of maternity care in hospitals is an ongoing process,” Ghaly said. “Although we have more work to do, the data shows that we are heading in the right direction. These annual measurements through Cal Hospital Compare help us to applaud those hospitals that are doing excellent work while also showing where improvement is still needed.”
Evidence suggests that the hospital where a woman delivers, and practice patterns of her obstetric team, will impact the likelihood of having a Csection. Even for low-risk, first-birth pregnancies, huge variations are noted in C-section rates at individual hospitals. In California hospitals, these rates range from 12% to more than 30%.
Overuse of C-sections matters. For mothers, cesareans can result in higher rates of complications like hemorrhage, transfusions, infection and blood clots. Once a mother has had a C-section, she has a greater than 90% chance of having one again for subsequent births, leading to higher risks of additional major complications. The surgery also brings risks for babies, including higher rates of infection, respiratory complications and neonatal intensive care unit stays.