Our first child, head askew, had to be delivered by Caesarean. We loved the obstetrical surgeon who extracted him: Dr. Burgee worked fast, made us laugh, and left almost no scar. He saved the lives of my wife and son. I thanked my stars we lived in a Caesarean world.
But the operation hit Alice hard. Her legs ballooned with fluid, stranding her in bed; her incision hurt every time she moved or nursed; and her milk production faltered, stunting Nick's growth so that he required hospitalization. Mother and baby both took months to recover. So, two years later, when Alice got pregnant again, the first thing she said to our midwife, Martha, was, "Please tell me I don't have to have another Caesarean."
Martha obliged her, explaining that a normal vaginal delivery after C-section did carry extra risk, but that it was minimal. The best studies found that choosing a vaginal birth after having had a Caesarean (also known as VBAC) instead of a repeat C-section, roughly doubled the risk of uterine rupture, bringing it up from 0.3 percent-0.5 percent to around 0.6 percent-1 percent. And though a serious rupture can require an emergency Caesarean, these rarely occur and seldom cause lasting harm if a surgical team is in-house (as is the case at our birthing center in tiny Gifford Hospital in Randolph, Vt.). Roughly 75 percent of all VBACs go routinely, and those that don't usually end up as non-emergency Caesareans. This means that if a woman accepts a 1-in-200 chance of a rupture and emergency Caesarean, she has a 75 percent chance of avoiding another C-section altogether. Perhaps due to the recognition of these favorable odds, the rate of VBACs among mothers with previous Caesareans increased from 3 percent to 28 percent between 1981 and 1996. The change from the old "once a Caesarean, always a Caesarean" rule that had held for most of the 20th century had spared millions of women unnecessary surgery.
So, our daughter Linnea was born by vaginal delivery. Alice felt better after four hours than she had after four months following the Caesarean. We thanked our stars we lived in a VBAC world.
Unfortunately, during the past decade, more than 300 hospitals have stopped performing VBACs—and more do so monthly. The VBAC rate fell from 28 percent in 1996 to 12.7 percent in 2002, with double-digit drops in 2001 and 2002; repeat Caesareans now account for 13 percent of all births. The drop in VBACs accounts for most of the rise in overall Caesareans, from 20 percent in 1996 to 2002's record high of 27 percent. Many of these mothers who undergo Caesareans want VBACs but are denied that option by hospital bans that run counter to medicine's growing emphasis on patient autonomy and informed consent.
Why the turnabout?
Hospitals usually claim they're trying to protect mothers and babies from harm. But the truth is that hospitals ban VBACs for legal and business reasons, not medical ones. Several mothers have sued in recent years when VBACs led to uterine ruptures and damage to mother or baby. Some of these women won awards in the millions, usually because the emergency C-section had taken too long or the doctor hadn't warned them of increased risk. A key issue in such suits is a 1999 American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists guideline calling for "immediate" availability of O.R. teams to support VBACs. Immediate, on-site availability of such teams thus quickly became a de facto legal standard.
Hospitals can sharply
reduce their legal exposure by having such teams on call.
But staffing these teams creates its own problem, which our
Dr. Burgee calls "the harmony on the ship issue." Some
hospital staffs rebel at the request to remain in-house
while a mother attempts a VBAC. Hospitals with round-the-clock
staffs might already have all the people needed—a surgeon or
OB, anesthesiologist, operating room crew, pediatrician,
assistant surgeon—on the premises. But at other hospitals,
particularly smaller ones, those people might have to make
special trips to the hospital to stand by during a VBAC for
as long as the labor takes. Such hospitals may have to
choose between VBACs and a happy surgical unit.
As it happens, Burgee and the rest of the Gifford staff
support the hospital's VBAC commitment, even though the
hospital (15 beds in the main unit, another eight in the
birthing center) is the sort of small operation considered
unsuitable for VBACs. The staff is unusually cohesive, and
the birthing center—the first such center in Vermont,
established in 1977—has long supported a team of midwives
who work with the hospital's obstetricians with unusual
collegiality and ease. In short, the hospital leans toward
patient choice and a noninterventionist approach.
Gifford's staff and administration were also influenced by
the findings of the Vermont/New Hampshire VBAC Project,
which from 2000 to 2002 enlisted OBs, midwives, and birthing-center
and obstetrical staffs from the region's hospitals to draw
on the scientific literature and their own experience to
create sensible VBAC policies. The resulting guidelines
offer both small hospitals like Gifford and big academic
centers like Dartmouth advice on how to provide VBACs safely
and economically. (The guidelines outline how to assess the
risk level of each patient—low, medium, or high—and set
staffing levels and availability accordingly; they also
remind hospitals to fully review risks and possible
procedures with the patient.) That the project involved
staff from so many hospitals has helped give it broad
support in the two states, where almost all the large
hospitals and many smaller ones continue to offer VBACs. The
results are encouraging. Gifford's birthing center, for
instance, hosts some 12 to 15 attempted VBACs a year—hundreds
over the past three decades. About 1 in 5 of these women
ended up having a Caesarean, but none has ruptured or gone
to emergency Caesareans.
A study just released in the New England Journal of
Medicine—the largest and most rigorous to date, involving
almost 34,000 births at 19 academic hospitals from 2000 to
2003—confirms the VBAC's minimal risk. The study included
roughly 18,000 women who chose VBAC and 16,000 who elected a
repeat Caesarean. Mishaps struck a small percentage of each
group. Of those who chose VBAC, 74 percent delivered
vaginally, and the rest had Caesareans. One-hundred-twenty-four
VBACers (0.7 percent) experienced uterine ruptures (14 of
these were discovered after a vaginal birth, and 110 were
discovered during Caesareans that were initiated when labor
stalled or a fetal monitor indicated distress); seven of the
babies whose mothers' uteruses ruptured (0.04 percent of all
the planned VBAC births) suffered hypoxia-related brain
damage that was likely caused by these uterine ruptures, and
two of those babies (0.01 percent) died. The Caesarean group,
meanwhile, saw twice as many maternal deaths (7 versus 3, or
0.04 percent for Caesareans versus 0.02 percent for VBAC).
Overall, "adverse events," ranging from minor complications
to those dozen deaths, occurred in 5.5 percent of the VBAC
births and 3.6 percent of the elective Caesareans. VBACs
posed more risk to infants, C-sections to mothers. A woman
choosing VBAC over repeat Caesarean, the report study
concluded, increased her overall risk of adverse outcome by
0.046 percent¬¬—a factor of about 1 in 2,000.
These odds make the hospitals' complaints about VBAC's
safety sound rather disingenuous. To be sure, the most
serious adverse outcomes hold our attention, as well they
might; brain-damaged and dead infants and mothers who die,
lose their uteruses, or live their lives in pain rank among
our worst nightmares. But these horrors attend Caesareans,
too. And VBAC carries a risk premium similar to or less than
that of numerous elective procedures—or birth in general.
Fallopian tube ligation for birth control, for instance,
fails in 1 of 200 cases, creating the possibility of a life-threatening
ectopic pregnancy. Epidural anesthesia during labor raises
the chance of instrument-assisted delivery, stalled or long
labor, maternal fever, maternal low blood pressure, and
Caesarean—all of which cause further, often grave, dangers.
A VBAC goes badly, however, with extreme rarity. Covering a
VBAC, says Burgee, is usually quite boring.
Given his support of VBACs, I was surprised to learn that
Burgee himself doesn't perform them. He did for two decades,
but he stopped in 1990 when he reduced his practice to half-time
while he got a law degree (so far unused). When he resumed
his full-time practice, he didn't take them up again. He
stopped, he says, partly because his legal education made
him see his legal risks more starkly. Managing the cases
thus seemed more complicated than ever: The OB in him would
be pulling for the VBAC, while the surgeon, lawyer, and
potential trial defendant would worry that he should wheel
the mother to the O.R. Now he explains to his patients why
he doesn't perform VBACs, outlines the odds as well as the
arguments for and against, and offers the names of midwives
and doctors who will perform the procedure. Burgee's stand,
distinctly personal, provides excellent care for his
patients while leaving them every option; one can scarcely
object.
Likewise, who can question my wife's choice to pursue a VBAC?
Given two nearly equal risks she chose the risk she felt
most comfortable with.
Both decisions highlight the perversity of hospitals banning
VBACs. When a hospital bans the practice, it takes away the
right of doctors, midwives, and patients to make such
personal choices; it settles by institutional edict a
decision that should belong to patient and caretaker. The
choice is indeed serious: A Caesarean is major surgery, and
a VBAC adds a risk that is tiny but terrible. But choosing
between the two options isn't a matter of right or wrong,
statistical clarity, or policy imperatives. It's a judgment
call—one that a hospital has no business making.
David Dobbs, author of Reef
Madness, writes on science, medicine, and culture.