Thanks

Kate
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Helen and Graham" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, November 21, 2005 8:47 PM
Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] Another blow for VBAC


It was from The Australian website Kate.

Helen

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Kate &/or Nick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, November 21, 2005 8:34 PM
Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] Another blow for VBAC


> Helen,
>
> Which paper did you get this article from?
>
> Thanks
>
> Kate
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Helen and Graham" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Monday, November 21, 2005 9:07 AM
> Subject: Re: [ozmidwifery] Another blow for VBAC
>
>
> Here is another version of the Sydney Morning Herald article which seems
> to
> have distorted some of the facts where it states "New research published
> in
> the Medical Journal of Australia has found these women [first time mothers
> having a caesarian] are more vulnerable to uterine ruptures during birth,
> post-partum bleeding, infection and hysterectomies than women who go
> through
> natural labour for their first birth".  Am I reading it incorrectly? It
> seems confusing at best and misleading at worst if that is the case!
>
> Helen Cahill
> Caesars pose risk for later deliveries
> From:
> By Amanda Hodge
> November 21, 2005
>
> HOLLYWOOD mothers love it and lawyers want more of it, but a new
> Australian
> study warns that first-time mothers having a caesarean section face
> greater
> risk of problems if they choose to deliver naturally in later pregnancies.
>
> New research published in the Medical Journal of Australia has found these
> women are more vulnerable to uterine ruptures during birth, post-partum
> bleeding, infection and hysterectomies than women who go through natural
> labour for their first birth.
> But women who delivered their first and subsequent children by caesarean
> were at lower risk of haemorrhage and intensive care admissions than those
> who went through vaginal birth.
>
> With record numbers of women choosing to deliver by caesarean section for
> convenience rather than medical reasons, the study by the New South Wales
> Health Department warns women should think twice before going under the
> knife.
>
> Study co-author and professor of perinatal medicine David Henderson-Smart
> said the increased risk of complications arose because a caesarean section
> left a scar on the uterus which, in the worst cases, could rupture during
> vaginal birth.
>
> "All the complications relate to how the afterbirth attaches to the side
> of
> the womb and whether the womb gets into trouble," Professor
> Henderson-Smart
> said.
>
>
> "That doesn't mean you can't have a vaginal birth, but it has to be
> thought
> about carefully."
> The population-based study looked at 136,101 second-time mothers who gave
> birth between 1998 and 2002, 19 per cent of whom delivered their first
> child
> by caesarean section.
>
> While complications were uncommon, the study found 51 per cent of uterine
> ruptures, 19 per cent of hysterectomies and 32per cent of post-partum
> infections were a result of primary caesarean sections.
>
> Babies could also face greater problems - four per cent of premature
> births
> and five per cent of all neonatal intensive care admissions were
> attributable to primary caesarean section - but the study found no
> increased
> risk of neonatal death as a result.
>
> That contrasts with the findings of a Scottish study published in the New
> England Journal of Medicine last November that found an increased risk of
> stillbirths and brain injury in babies if mothers tried to go through
> natural labour after delivering by caesarean for their first birth.
>
> Obstetrician and former Australian Medical Association president David
> Molloy said the rise in caesarean sections - more than 20 per cent of all
> births and as high as 25 per cent in the private sector - was due to a
> combination of factors.
>
> "Maternal requests are a very significant driver. It's also partly because
> older women are having babies (which often leads to greater complications)
> and partly because C-sections are the medico-legal gold standard," Dr
> Molloy
> said.
>
> "All the big cases in court revolve around the fact you didn't do a caesar
> or didn't do one quickly enough."
>
> Dr Molloy said obstetricians were also seeing an increasing number of
> second-generation women having caesarean deliveries as a result of
> inheriting their mothers' small pelvises.
>
> "The treatment for that years ago was to say no more children, but in the
> past 40 years we have hauled those people out of trouble with a caesar and
> so they're passing on their smaller pelvis to their daughters."
>
> The study found women who had caesarean deliveries tended to be older and
> wealthier, and were more likely to suffer obstetric complications.
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Andrea Robertson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Monday, November 21, 2005 7:19 AM
> Subject: [ozmidwifery] Another blow for VBAC
>
>
>> This is in today's Sydney Morning Herald. No doubt this report will
>> trigger furious debate (as it should) but let's try an get the focus on
>> the first caesarean, not the possible risks with VBAC.
>>
>> These figures for first caesareans are shocking - higher that the USA!
>>
>> http://www.smh.com.au/news/health/caesareans-lift-risks-in-later-births--study/2005/11/20/1132421548464.html
>>
>> Andrea
>>
>> -----
>> Andrea Robertson
>> Birth International * ACE Graphics * Associates in Childbirth Education
>>
>> e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> web: www.birthinternational.com
>>
>>
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