The AMA says “Comprehensive Sex Ed Said to Have Most Impact.” Baloney.
September 10, 2009Faith-Based Health and Healing – Part 5 – What Causes Sickness?
September 13, 2009This blog series is designed to help women who are developing a birth plan join together with like-minded birthing professionals so as to have a shorter and safer labor and birth. Today we’ll look at the costs of “abnormal labor.” Although written primarily for professional birth attendants, I hope information will be helpful to lay women planning their birth.
The medical literature has many, many articles that discuss the potential risks and costs for not keeping normal labor normal; including:
- increased dystocia (dysfunctional, abnormal labor),
- increased fetal distress, and
- the increase in unnecessary operative deliveries.
(1) Increased dystocia
Although, “… dystocia has remained a poorly defined term,”(1) for the purposes of this paper “… dystocia is divided into two major categories.
The first category of dystocia, true cephalopelvic disproportion, is characterized by failure of descent of the head after complete dilation and includes the diagnosis of persistent occiput posterior.
The second category, inefficient uterine action, is defined as failure of the cervix to dilate (<1cm/h with no more than 7 contractions per 15 min) and the head to descend … (and) is divided into four subcategories:
- unsuccessful attempt at induction,
- error in the diagnosis of labor (defined as regular painful uterine contractions that are accompanied by one or more of four additional criteria:
- dilation,
- effacement in primiparas,
- rupture of the membranes, and
- loss of the mucous plug or bloody show(3)),
- inadequate response to treatment, and
- oxytocin not given.”(2)
Undoubtedly “ …the most significant step toward a solution to the problem of dystocia … has been the recognition of certain fundamental differences between nulliparous and parous women…”(3) and recognizing that dystocia can be caused by certain management practices. However, “… lack of objectivity (in defining dystocia) may result in variations in practice patterns seen for dystocia.”(1)
Preventing dystocia will, by definition, help keep normal labor normal.
(2) Increased fetal distress and “fetal distress”
To diagnosis fetal distress when it does not exist is not in the best interest of the laboring woman.
“Like dystocia, fetal distress has remained a poorly defined term.”(1) Surgical or operative intervention “for the diagnosis of ‘fetal distress’ appears to vary depending on institutional and other nonclinical factors,”(1) and “…the observation that cesarean deliveries for ‘fetal distress’ peak during nighttime hours raises the possibility that the interpretation of fetal monitoring tracing is influenced by physician and patient fatigue or other clinical factors.”(1)
Much reliance for the diagnosis of fetal distress has “been placed on the interpretation of fetal monitor tracings, which has been shown to have great interrater variability.”(4) This has caused some to critically question the routine use of continuous electronic fetal monitoring (EFM).(5-13)
“Of concern is not only the lack of benefit (of EFM) to women in labor, but also the high false-positive rate of electronic recording resulting in more diagnosis of ‘fetal distress’ and increased intervention in labor, including cesarean section.”(13)
Clearly, preventing true or false fetal distress will, by definition, help keep normal labor normal.
3) Increased cesarean delivery rate
There have been strong calls in the literature for physicians to improve their cesarean rates.(5,6,13–26)
For example, “In the US in 1992, 22.6% of deliveries were C/S (of 3.97 million births). The projected optimum would be 5-12%, and in 1992 only 90 hospitals in the US were <15%: 35% (were for) previous CS (50-55% should be VBAC, instead of 25.4%), 34% (for) dystocia (abnormal progress in labor), 12% breech (version should work about 66%), 9% “Fetal distress” (50-90% reduced with intermittent auscultation).”(14)
If these projections are correct, keeping normal labor normal by avoiding, as much as possible, dystocia and false diagnosis of fetal distress could reduce cesarean rates by 20 – 40%.
In the US, the cesarean section rate is “iatroepidemic”(17) according to Emanuel Friedman, MD, who says, “physicians should be forbidden to do a cesarean in the latent phase of second stage labor … 70% of cesareans are unnecessary for women with protraction disorders and 50% are unnecessary for arrest disorders.”(17)
Others would say, “The most common indication for a first cesarean section is dystocia (difficult or prolonged labor), which accounts for about one third of all cesarean sections in the United States, approximately twice as high a rate as in other countries with similar medical care systems.”(15)
With labor dystocia, “…provider, payer, and institutional biases have been implicated in causing variations in cesarean delivery rates.”(1,22,23)
“There is general agreement that a solution to the problem of dystocia would go a long way toward resolving the contentious issue of high cesarean birth rates.”(2)
In addition to dystocia, “…cesarean delivery for fetal dystocia is responsible for some of the increase in cesarean section rates.”(1,24,25)
Mortimer Rosen, MD points out, “Managing labor is still an art…the rising cesarean rate suggests that the art of patient care may be in jeopardy.”(17)
Here’s the entire series:
- Introduction
- The Costs of Abnormal Labor
- THE 10 P’s
- Philosophy,
- Partners,
- Professionals,
- Pain control,
- Procedures,
- Patience,
- Preparation,
- Positions,
- Payment, and
- Prayer.