Abstract
Introduction
High cesarean delivery rate has been a global public health concern. This study assesses the effect of medical interventions and societal changes on cesarean delivery rates in a Chinese tertiary hospital.
Material and methods
A retrospective study including all live births ≥34-week gestation between 2008 and 2016 from Guangzhou Women and Children’s Medical Center was divided into 5 stages: (1) no interventions; (2) patient-controlled epidural analgesia; (3) episiotomy restriction; (4) new labor management; (5) universal two-child policy. An interrupted time series design was used to measure the effect of interventions on overall cesarean rate, primary cesarean rate, maternal and neonatal outcomes.
Results
There were 126,609 deliveries including 49,092 cesarean deliveries and 77,517 vaginal deliveries in this period. Overall cesarean delivery rate declined after implementing patient-controlled epidural analgesia, episiotomy restriction and universal two-child policy. Primary cesarean rate decreased after implementing episiotomy restriction. Cesarean rate with previous cesarean dramatically increased, and maternal request cesarean rate decreased gradually. Low Apgar rate (score ≤7 at 5 min) increased after episiotomy restriction and maternal postpartum hemorrhage rate increased after new labor management.
Conclusions
Patient-controlled epidural analgesia, episiotomy restriction and the universal two-child policy showed the most significant effects to reducing the cesarean rate.
Acknowledgments
We thank Jia Chen, Junjie Bao for their assistance with data reduction.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.