2/2/11

Inductions

Woah woah, they are actually saying that there are too many inductions? I'm shocked. But do I think that they will stop telling women that their babies are too big to push out or that they can't go more than 10 days over!!?? No, but this is a start to getting women to take charge of their care and BE PATIENT!!!

Too many U.S. births induced early for no medical reason

HealthDay

Wed, Jan 26, 2011 (HealthDay News) — Five to 40 percent or more of births in the United States are induced early without any good medical reason, according to a new hospital-by-hospital report.

And there is tremendous variation in the rates documented by hospitals voluntarily reporting these "early elective induction" deliveries, even within the same community. In Los Angeles, for instance, the rates of babies delivered early without a good medical reason ranged from 4 percent to 29 percent. In Boston, the rates reported by different hospitals ranged from near zero to 27 percent.

"This is the first real evidence that the practice of scheduling newborn deliveries without medical reasons is common and varies among hospitals," said Leah Binder, CEO of Leapfrog Group, an employer-driven hospital quality watchdog group. Leapfrog announced the findings of its annual hospital report at a Wednesday news conference.

"The information is extremely disturbing," she continued. "We are calling on hospitals to put policies in place to prevent early elective deliveries."

According to Binder, "elective inductions have now outpaced medical inductions."

The consequences of such deliveries can be grave. "The last few weeks of a pregnancy are critical to the development of the baby's brain, lung and liver," said Dr. Alan Fleishman, senior vice president and medical director of the March of Dimes Foundation. "Babies born just a few weeks early have feeding problems, jaundice, inability to hold temperature and tremendous increased costs. Every week counts."

Babies delivered early also face a higher risk of death, spending time in a neonatal intensive care unit and life-long health problems, according to a statement from the Leapfrog Group.

Plus, using gestational dating to figure out a delivery time can be "grossly inadequate" unless a woman has an ultrasound exam in the first trimester, Fleishman pointed out. If the dating is off by even two weeks, the baby could end up being premature (born before 37 weeks), he said.

Leapfrog's target goal for 2010 was 12 percent, but it is now lowering that threshold to 5 percent, said Barbara Rudolph, senior scientific director of Childbirth Connection, an advocacy group that promotes quality maternal care.

The good news is that about 50 percent of hospitals reported early elective delivery rates of 12 percent or below. The bad news is that an equal half reported rates higher than that figure.

But more good news is that 29 percent of hospitals reported rates of 5 percent or less, indicating that such low rates are achievable, said Rudolph.

Why are so many early elective deliveries occurring?

According to Maureen Corry, Childbirth Connection's executive director, a recent survey found that the leading reason (accounting for about 25 percent of early births) was caregiver concern that the mother was overdue. About 19 percent were medical inductions, another 19 percent were due to the mother's desire "to get the pregnancy over with," and the final one (17 percent) came from concern about the size of the baby. According to Fleischman, large babies aren't a valid reason for early delivery.

And 75 percent of mothers actually think that 34 to 36 weeks is full-term (although it is really 39 to 40 weeks), Fleischman added. Providers' desire for convenience and predictable schedules could also play a role.

"We encourage women to wait until they've completed the 39th week of pregnancy [to deliver] unless it's medically called for," Binder said. "Every woman in America needs to know [information on a hospital's early elective delivery rate] before she enters the door of a hospital."

1 comment:

JC said...

Don't get me started... :) A couple of points. It's amazing how many women think that their due date is the absolute last day they should have the baby. Hello. It's an ESTIMATION. There are for SURE 2-5 days that you cannot be pregnant - remember it's calculated from the first day of your last period?!? Hello! Second, I can't believe how many complications I've been hearing about lately from women who are induced. "Emergency" C-Section? Yeah, because you couldn't be patient.

People need to realize that our bodies are born to have babies. They know EXACTLY what to do. Let nature run it's course. Billions of women have done so, and there is no reason why we can't do it too.

Rant over. :)