End unnecessary C-sections
Minister
for Women and Child Development Maneka Gandhi has rightly called for strict
regulation of caesarean deliveries in the country. Responding to a Change.org
petition drawing attention to women being forced by unscrupulous doctors
towards surgical deliveries or Caesarean sections (C-sections) when these are
not needed, she has suggested that it should be made mandatory for the
hospitals and doctors to make public the number of C-sections and normal
deliveries they perform each month. Doctors who recommend caesareans when these
are not medically necessary should be named and shamed, she says, stressing
that the problem requires a multi-pronged approach. The C-section deliveries
are far more expensive than normal ones. They are a huge financial burden on the
parents of the new-born. But for hospitals, gynaecologists, anaesthetists etc,
they are a money-spinner. Greed, lack of medical ethics and pressure from
hospitals to meet targets for C-sections prompt doctors to force pregnant women
to undergo caesarean deliveries. There are situations when a caesarean delivery
is necessary such as when the mother or baby is in distress or other factors
make a vaginal delivery dangerous. In such situations, a C-section is a
lifesaver.
According to the World Health Organisation, the “ideal rate” for C-sections is 10-15% of all deliveries in a country. However, the National Family Health Survey 2015-16 reveals that the rate of C-sections in India far exceeds this norm. In Telangana, for instance, the C-section rate is 58%, the highest in the country. Worryingly, the percentage of caesarean births has registered a sharp increase over the past decade. In Tamil Nadu, C-section deliveries rose from 20.3% in 2005-06 to 34.1% in 2015-16. While private hospitals are driving the high rate of caesarean deliveries in the country, government hospitals too opt for unnecessary caesarean deliveries. In Telangana, for instance, caesarean deliveries accounted for 75% and 41% of all deliveries in private and government hospitals, respectively.
Like all surgeries, C-sections carry the risk of excessive blood loss, blood clots and infections. Complications could even result in the death of the mother and/or the infant. Robust measures are needed to halt the excessive resort to caesarean deliveries. In addition to punishing errant doctors and hospitals, there is a need for creating public awareness. That would not only reduce exploitation by doctors but also compel pregnant women who ask for C-section deliveries to reconsider their ill-informed choices.
03.03.2017
Hope is the only thing stronger than fear
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