Published:
Childbirth Connection Report Reveals Serious Problems in Maternity Care Quality and Value
Overuse of Cesarean Section and Other Interventions Puts Women and Babies at Risk, Increases Costs

Over 31% of US births are now by cesarean
section, although a 5% to 10% rate is best for mothers and babies. The
extra cost is well over $2.5 billion per year. The excess cesareans buy no
reduction in maternal and newborn deaths. But they cause unneeded exposure
to the dozens of adverse effects more common with c-sections. This is just
the most striking example of how health care provided to mothers giving
birth exposes them to avoidable harm and expense. These conclusions are
found in "Evidence-Based Maternity Care: What It Is and What It Can
Achieve," a report released today by Childbirth Connection, The Reforming
States Group, and the Milbank Memorial Foundation.
The report cites an extensive body of evidence to make the case that,
despite paying top dollar, American women do not receive the best maternity
care. It is the most comprehensive review to date of how maternity care is
delivered, financed, and experienced by mothers, families, and health care
payers. It concludes that maternity care can be significantly improved
using evidence-based care.
Main Recommendations for Improvement
To speed adoption of evidence-based maternity care, the report recommends:
-- Develop a standardized evidence-based set of maternity care
performance measures to address overuse and underuse.
-- Incorporate these measures into Medicaid quality improvement
activities, and encourage private insurers and other entities to adopt
them.
-- Reform the reimbursement system -- with such strategies as reducing
payment for overused services, increasing payment for underused services,
and rewarding high-performing providers and facilities.
-- Support more research into evidence-based maternity care, including
long-term effects of common maternity practices.
-- Increase the use of evidence-based maternity care by educating a wide
range of stakeholders.
"If implemented, these recommendations can help close the evidence-practice
gap in maternity care," said Maureen Corry, co-author and Executive
Director, Childbirth Connection. "There's a role for everyone --
clinicians, health systems, payers, policymakers, consumers and the media.
It's time to seize the opportunities to ensure that all mothers and babies
receive safe, effective and satisfying maternity care."
"The report shows maternity care is one more example of what's wrong with
American health care. We're paying too much and getting the worst results
in the developed world because of unneeded care," said Reforming States
Group Vice Chair, State Senator Charles Scott of Wyoming. "The main causes
are that providers earn more from unneeded care while fear of malpractice
litigation encourages the same unneeded care. In my state, nearly half the
births are paid for by the taxpayers through the Medicaid program. If we
can implement the recommendations of this report, we can both reduce costs
and improve the care our mothers and babies get."
Overused Maternity Practices
Cesarean section is one notable example of frequently overused maternity
care interventions documented in the report. C-sections are now the most
common operating room procedure in the US. Although clearly beneficial and
lifesaving in selected circumstances, the absolute indications for cesarean
section apply to only a small proportion of births. Yet rates have steadily
risen from 20.7% in 1996 to a record high of 31.1% in 2006, a 50% increase.
Wide variation in medical practice exists -- for example, differences in
rates of performing cesarean section vary across physicians, hospitals, or
geographic areas. Just a fraction of these differences are due to
differences in the health needs of mothers and babies. Rather, this
variation reflects differences in professional styles of practice and other
factors such as the number of providers and hospitals offering the surgery,
concerns about being sued, and financial incentives that favor surgery. The
evidence showed that areas with higher rates of cesareans had more
inappropriate care and more surgery in healthier women. The report
clarifies that many other common maternity interventions, e.g. labor
induction and epidural, are also overused. It can be accessed at
www.childbirthconnection.org/ebmc/
Underused Maternity Practices
The analysis also found underuse of many effective practices with few or no
known adverse effects. These practices include continuous support
throughout labor (such as that provided by a doula), numerous measures that
increase comfort and facilitate labor progress, upright and side-lying
positions for giving birth, delayed cord clamping, and early skin-to-skin
contact between mother and baby. More frequent use of these beneficial
forms of care would lead to improved outcomes for many mothers and babies.
Best available evidence also supports providing access to vaginal birth
after cesarean (VBAC) for most women with a previous cesarean, but such
access has fallen off sharply in recent years, despite demand from women,
and more than nine out of ten women with previous cesareans now have repeat
cesareans.
"Hundreds of rigorous systematic reviews of best evidence assess the safety
and effectiveness of maternity practices," said Carol Sakala, lead report
author and Director of Programs, Childbirth Connection. "Yet, all too often
the evidence is ignored."
Maternity Care is Major Segment of Hospital Market
Most maternity care provided to women who give birth in US hospitals -- a
large and primarily healthy population -- is resource and technology
intensive. Six of the fifteen most commonly performed hospital procedures
in the entire population are associated with childbirth. Hospital charges
for maternal and newborn care are greater than charges for any other
condition: $79 billion in 2005, jumping to $86 billion in 2006.
Maternal and newborn care are the most costly hospital conditions for both
Medicaid (which pays for 42% of all births in the country) and private
insurers (shouldering 51%). And, the proportion of Medicaid-covered births
is growing, making the quality and cost of maternity care a significant
public policy issue. The report finds that lower intensity care, like that
provided by midwives, is safe and effective, avoids many procedures with
established risks, and is cheaper. Yet, just a fraction of women who give
birth in hospitals today receive low intensity care.
And while the US spends much more on health care, its performance lags far
behind other developed nations on quality indicators including low
birthweight, perinatal and maternal mortality, and cesarean rates. The
report spotlights the market influences and other factors contributing to
what has been called the "Perinatal Paradox: doing more and accomplishing
less" (Rosenblatt 1989).
About Milbank Memorial Fund
Milbank Memorial Fund is an endowed operating foundation that works to
improve health by helping decision makers in the public and private sectors
acquire and use the best available evidence to inform policy for health
care and population health. The Fund has engaged in nonpartisan analysis,
study, research and communication on significant issues in health policy
since its inception in 1905.
About Reforming States Group
The Reforming States Group (RSG), organized in 1992, is a voluntary
association of leaders in health policy in the legislative and executive
branches of government from all fifty states, Canada, England, Scotland and
Australia.
Childbirth Connection
Founded in 1918, Childbirth Connection is a not-for-profit organization
working to improve the quality of maternity care through research,
education, advocacy and policy. As a voice for the needs and interests of
childbearing families, Childbirth Connection uses best research evidence
and the results of its periodic national Listening to Mothers surveys to
inform policy, practice, education and research.
Copyright © 2008, MarketWire
Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
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