Reproductive Health

C-Section Jump Allied With Higher Medical Bills

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Any woman who senses pressure to deliver by C-section is backed up by statistics showing a jump in these deliveries, from 1-in-5 a decade ago to 1-in-3 today. Insurance companies say they are trying to curb the more costly procedure.



(WOMENSENEWS)--Last year Denielle, 32, was excited about giving birth to her first child. Her pregnancy was going smoothly until one month before her due date, her water broke. She went to the hospital and 19 hours later she was getting prepped for a C-section.

"I didn't have any contractions and from the monitor, the baby was not in distress," recalls Denielle, who asked that her last name be withheld. "I was dilated at one centimeter, but my doctor kept insisting that a C-section would be the best thing for the baby even though I wanted a vaginal birth."

The surgery went fine and Denielle delivered a healthy baby, but she was left with the impression of being pressured into having a C-section.

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Nearly 1-in-3 U.S. babies are now delivered by Cesarean, compared to 1-in-5 a decade ago.

Among black women, Cesareans are slightly more common, representing 34 percent of births in 2007--the last year data was collected--up from 22 percent in 1996, according to a recent report from the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Center for Health Statistics.

Researchers point to many factors behind the rise in C-sections. Older mothers, multiple births (due to fertility drugs) and bigger babies all contribute. Medical issues such as diabetes, hypertension--particularly among African Americans--are also causing complications during labor and ultimately leading to more emergency C-sections.

Litigation-shy doctors practicing defensive medicine is another factor. In an study published in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology last year, nearly a third of the 5,644 doctors surveyed said they were performing more C-sections because they feared lawsuits. Eight percent said they had quit delivering babies, and nearly a third of those said it was because of liability issues.

Financial Incentives

Desirre Andrews is president of the International Cesarean Awareness Network, an organization with a mission to prevent unnecessary Caesareans. She sees financial incentives driving the rise in C-sections.

New York City's largest public hospital, Bellevue Medical Center, and one of the city's larger private hospitals, Lenox Hill, show how much more medical money is involved with C-sections.

In 2007 at Bellevue Hospital the average fee for a C-section was $9,839; for a vaginal birth it was $1,912.

At Lenox Hill Hospital, the average fee for a C-section was $20,975; for a vaginal birth, $8,530.

EmblemHealth, formerly HIP Health Plan of New York and GHI (Group Health Incorporated), covers nearly 3.3 million people with access to more than 106,000 health care providers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

The company spokesperson says the hospitals in its network are not profiting from C-sections and neither are the physicians, who receive the same payment for a vaginal delivery as for a C-section. But even though the physician's payment is the same, other expenses drive up the costs of C-sections, says Ilene Margolin, senior vice president for public affairs at EmblemHealth, citing a longer average length of hospital stay, anesthesiology fees and higher complication rates.

"Hospitalization costs for the infants delivered by Cesarean sections are also higher as these babies have a higher likelihood of requiring neonatal intensive care unit services," Margolin says.

1 COMMENTS | Login or Sign Up to post comments

Are women being educated on how to be assertive with their physicians? It sounds as though this is not happening anywhere in the process during pregnancy, with all the education for pregnancy, child-birth, and caring for herself and her new baby after delivery. This evidently is as important a topic, as too many women are being taken advantage of!

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