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DISCLAIMER!

"Birth is as safe as life gets."
~ Harriet Hartigan |
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The International Cesarean Awareness
Network, with the hope that parents, childbirth educators, doulas, nurses,
midwives and doctors together can effectively reduce the rate of unnecessary
cesarean sections and their effects, presents these facts.
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When a cesarean is necessary,
it can be a lifesaving technique for both mother and baby, and worth the
risks involved.
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One in four births is a cesarean,
with some hospitals reporting as high as one in two. This represents a
400% increase in less than 15 years. This cesarean rate increase has not
led to an improvement in the infant mortality and morbidity rates but
instead has put mothers and babies at greater risk. Rates began to fall
in the mid-1990s, but are rising again in the new millennium.
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The cesarean section rate remains at
an alarmingly higher rate than the 15% average recommended by the World
Health Organization. WHO estimates that half (50%) of all cesarean
sections performed in the United States are unnecessary.
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The natality statistics released by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that cesarean
delivery rates were up for the third year in a row in 1999, reversing a
steady decline between 1989 and 1995. Cesarean births accounted for 22
percent of the 3.9 million live births in 1999.
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A cesarean poses documented medical
risks to the mother's health, including infections, hemorrhage,
transfusion, hysterectomy, embolism, injury to other organs, anesthesia
complication, psychological complications. One-half of all cesarean women
suffer complications, and the mortality rate is at least two to four times
that of women with vaginal births. Approximately 180 women die annually
in the United States from elective repeat cesareans.
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Each successive cesarean greatly
increases the risk of developing placenta previa and/or placenta accreta
in subsequent pregnancies. Both of these complications pose
life-threatening risks to mother and baby. Cesareans also increase the
odds of infertility and ectopic pregnancy in subsequent pregnancies.
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An elective cesarean section
increases the risk to the infant of premature birth and respiratory
distress syndrome, both of which are associated with multiple
complications, intensive care and burdensome financial cost. Even with
mature babies, the absence of labor increases the risk of breathing
problems and other complications. Far from doing better, babies born by
cesarean fare worse than those born vaginally.
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Cesareans can delay the opportunity
for early mother-newborn interaction, breastfeeding, and the establishment
of family bonds.
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Cesarean rates are influenced by
nonmedical factors. These include: individual philosophy and training,
convenience of doctor or patient, the patient's socioeconomic status, peer
pressure, fear of litigation, and financial gain.
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Obstetricians offer defensive
medicine as an excuse for the astronomical U.S. cesarean rate.
Deliberately performing unnecessary surgery in the belief it avoids
lawsuits is indefensible. That many obstetricians seem oblivious to the
profound violation of ethical principles is shocking.
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Vaginal Birth After Cesarean (VBAC)
is safer for both mother and infant, in most cases, than is routine
elective cesarean, which is major surgery.
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The risk to your infant from the
very low incidence of uterine rupture (less than 1%) is much less than the
risk to your infant from respiratory distress as a result of a scheduled
cesarean.
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Many indications for cesarean can
and should be questions, including cephalopelvic disproportion, (CPD or
baby too big, pelvis too small), dystocia, failure to progress, breech,
etc.
This information is found in
well-respected medical journals and government publications including the
National Institute of Health (NIH) taskforce report on cesarean childbirth
published in 1982.
ã
International Cesarean Awareness Network,
Inc.
All right
reserved
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LOCAL
LEADERSHIP
Christy Reeves, CCCE
303-663-8793
barefootdoula@yahoo.com
Kristi
R. Conroy, CCCE,
CLD, CLE
303-477-6243
Conroy_4@msn.com

ICAN of Colorado
Helping Colorado's families have the births
they want!

Of
all the rights of women,
the greatest
is
to be a mother.
~Lynn Yutang |