• Birth · Jun 2008

    Cesarean section: Norwegian women do as obstetricians do--not as obstetricians say.

    • Vilhjalmur Finsen, Andreas Hopstock Storeheier, and Olaf Gjerløw Aasland.
    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, St. Olav's University Hospital, and Department of Neuroscience, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
    • Birth. 2008 Jun 1;35(2):117-20.

    BackgroundThe worrying trend of an ever-increasing incidence of delivery by cesarean section has been commented on repeatedly. Studies from the United Kingdom and the United States have found that many obstetricians would choose cesarean section for themselves without strict medical indication, whereas similar studies from Denmark and Norway have indicated that almost none would choose cesarean section for themselves. The purpose of this study was to report the proportion of Norwegian obstetricians who have children born by cesarean section and to compare the rate with that among other physicians and that with the general population.MethodsQuestionnaires were sent to 1,500 random members of the Norwegian general public, 1,500 randomly selected physicians, and 423 random surgeons asking whether they had children born by cesarean section. All were between the ages of 40 and 65 years.ResultsThe response rate was 78 percent. In the general public with children, 12 percent reported that one or more of them were born by cesarean section. The average was 8 percent among those with only basic schooling compared with 16 percent (p < 0.02) among those who had been to university for more than 4 years. This figure was 19 percent among physicians in general (p < 0.001 compared with the general population), 26 percent among surgeons, and 27 percent among the 189 specialists in obstetrics and gynecology (p < 0.02 compared with the physicians in general).ConclusionThe rate of cesarean section in the general population is unlikely to fall as long as so many obstetricians have their own children delivered by cesarean section.

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