Friday, December 13, 2024
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Fewer c-sections in India’s poorer regions

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With a lot of deliveries still taking place at home and no national system to track them, it seems difficult to assess the situation. However, the data derived from the latest National Family and Health Survey (NFHS) conducted in the 2015-2016 shed a lot of light on childbirth practices across the country.
The IRD was able to chart some of the main trends and differentials in the country from the data issued from the latest National Family and Health Survey.
“The first finding of this study relates to the rapid increase in the number of cesarean deliveries performed in India since the last survey conducted in 2005-2006, a transformation linked to the increasing proportion of women delivering in hospitals,” declared Christophe Z Guilmoto, a demographer at Ceped research unit.
17.2 per cent of births in India was estimated to have been delivered by cesarean in 2010-16. This cesarean rate is already above the benchmark of 10-15 per cent proposed by the WHO and above levels observed in richer countries such as the Netherlands or Finland.
A second finding is that this national average of 17.2 per cent conceals considerable variations across social categories and regions. Many regions still lack access to adequate maternal facilities and cesarean rates in states such as Bihar or Madhya Pradesh lie below the 10 per cent level advanced by the WHO.
But the situation appears even more critical among the poorest quintile of the population (4.4 per cent of births delivered by cesarean), leading to extreme inequality in the access to cesarean within the country.
“During the same period, more than a third of the births are delivered by cesarean section among the richest quintile and in several states of South India such Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, and Telangana -with rates above 50 per cent reported in some districts,” underlined Alexandre Dumont, an epidemiologist in the same unit.
Such elevated rates point to the frequent use of surgical deliveries among low-risk pregnancies, especially in private facilities-this in spite of potential complications such as infection or haemorrhage.
All in all, the study estimated that the shortfall of cesarean deliveries in the poorest regions represented 2.2 per cent of deliveries in 2010-16, while the excess observed in more prosperous populations accounted for 7 per cent of them.
This analysis highlights the double burden faced by India’s health authorities: on one hand, the need to improve access to secure deliveries in many districts of North India and among the poor in order to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality, and on the other hand, the challenges presented by the growing overuse of cesarean deliveries in more advanced parts of the country.
For the researchers, current trends and India’s economic progress suggest that the proportion of births delivered by C-section will continue to increase in the future well above medically-justifiable levels unless efforts are made to curb the over-medicalization of childbirth. (ANI)

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