After analyzing more than 23,000 deliveries in 11 northwestern
hospitals by women with no known medical complications or risk
factors, researchers found that for births handled by a midwife, the
C-section rate was 30% lower among first-time mothers and 40% lower
among those who had previously given birth, compared to when women
labored under the care of an OB-GYN.
"In the group of patients who had care from a midwife, there was a
lower rate of interventions," said Dr. Vivienne Souter, research
director at the Obstetrical Care Outcomes Assessment Program (OBCOA),
a multicenter quality improvement collaborative of the Foundation
for Health Care Quality, an independent non-profit organization
based in Seattle.
"They were less likely to have an epidural, oxytocin (to speed
delivery), or an episiotomy compared to those looked after by an
obstetrician. It's really important, however, to stress that we were
looking at low-risk pregnancies in women giving birth in hospitals."
Most of the women - 19,284 - were cared for by obstetricians,
according to the report in Obstetrics & Gynecology.
Among women who had given birth previously, Souter's team found that
babies born under the supervision of a midwife had a higher rate of
shoulder dystocia, which happens when a woman has trouble pushing
the baby's shoulders out. The researchers weren't sure why this
happened, but Souter suggested it might be because in this study,
babies born with a midwife in attendance tended to be somewhat
larger than those born to mothers cared for by obstetricians.
There were some questions the researchers couldn't answer because
there were not enough data, Souter said. "We didn't have a big
enough study to evaluate all outcomes, particularly adverse
outcomes," she noted. "We need more data like this to better
understand maternal care in the U.S. and to derive strategies to
improve it."
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Another issue the researchers couldn't address was the possibility
their results might have been affected by the women having chosen
their providers. For example, it's possible that women who chose to
be cared for by a midwife could have been more committed to having a
vaginal birth, she added.
All the women in the study were pregnant with one baby, delivered at
term, had not had a previous cesarean birth and were healthy prior
to and during pregnancy. Women were excluded from the study if they
had their labor induced for a medical complication.
Souter cautions that the findings may not extend to more complicated
pregnancies.
The new study "is a great first step in looking at the comparison of
midwife care in a hospital setting to obstetrician care in a
hospital setting," said Suzanne Shores, division director of
midwifery and advanced practice providers at the UPMC Magee-Women's
Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. "Hopefully it will spur more
research in this area."
More research might answer questions, such as how did the fact that
women self-selected their providers affect outcomes like C-section
rates, Shores said. A lot of women who choose to be cared for by
midwives "want a low-intervention birth and no epidural."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2VubE8P Obstetrics & Gynecology, online
October 8, 2019.
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