Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.

BACKGROUND: In spite of the World Health Organization's recommendations to maintain caesarean delivery (CD) between 5% and 15% of total births, the rates of CD continue to rise in countries with routine access to medical services. As in Italy CD rate reached 38% in 2008, the highest at EU level...

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Main Authors: Pamela Barbadoro, Carlos Chiatti, Marcello Mario D'Errico, Francesco Di Stanislao, Emilia Prospero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3444483?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8ceb6417279c462baafba82a0a1d0fc72020-11-25T01:32:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0179e4390610.1371/journal.pone.0043906Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.Pamela BarbadoroCarlos ChiattiMarcello Mario D'ErricoFrancesco Di StanislaoEmilia ProsperoBACKGROUND: In spite of the World Health Organization's recommendations to maintain caesarean delivery (CD) between 5% and 15% of total births, the rates of CD continue to rise in countries with routine access to medical services. As in Italy CD rate reached 38% in 2008, the highest at EU level, we evaluated socioeconomic and clinical correlates of "elective" and "non programmed" CD in the Country. We performed a stratified analysis in order to verify whether the effect of such correlates differed among women with an "a priori" preference for natural and caesarean delivery respectively. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We analyzed cross-sectional data from the Italian National Statistics Institute (ISTAT) survey on health condition. Socio-demographic variables, information on maternal care services use and health conditions during pregnancy, as well as maternal preferences on delivery, were available for a representative sample of 2,474 primiparous women. After an initial bivariate analysis, we used logistic regressions to evaluate factors associated to the study outcomes. Overall CD accounted for 35.5% of the total births in our sample (CI 33.6-37.4%); moreover, 30.7% (CI 28.6-32.6%) of women preferring natural delivery actually delivered with a CD. Elective CD rate is higher among women over 35 years (22.9%, CI 18.8-27.4%), and those living in the South (26.2%, CI 23.0-29.6%). The multivariate analysis showed that, even adjusting for several confounders, women in the South, receiving care in the private sector had higher chances of CD, also in case of preference for natural delivery. CONCLUSION: Policy interventions are required to reduce the rate of undesired CD, e.g. increasing women knowledge regarding delivery in order to favour aware choices. An effective strategy to reduce CD rate should address the Southern Regions, as women here appear to have a very limited control over the delivery, in spite of a widespread preference for natural delivery.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3444483?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pamela Barbadoro
Carlos Chiatti
Marcello Mario D'Errico
Francesco Di Stanislao
Emilia Prospero
spellingShingle Pamela Barbadoro
Carlos Chiatti
Marcello Mario D'Errico
Francesco Di Stanislao
Emilia Prospero
Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Pamela Barbadoro
Carlos Chiatti
Marcello Mario D'Errico
Francesco Di Stanislao
Emilia Prospero
author_sort Pamela Barbadoro
title Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.
title_short Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.
title_full Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.
title_fullStr Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.
title_full_unstemmed Caesarean delivery in South Italy: women without choice. A cross sectional survey.
title_sort caesarean delivery in south italy: women without choice. a cross sectional survey.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description BACKGROUND: In spite of the World Health Organization's recommendations to maintain caesarean delivery (CD) between 5% and 15% of total births, the rates of CD continue to rise in countries with routine access to medical services. As in Italy CD rate reached 38% in 2008, the highest at EU level, we evaluated socioeconomic and clinical correlates of "elective" and "non programmed" CD in the Country. We performed a stratified analysis in order to verify whether the effect of such correlates differed among women with an "a priori" preference for natural and caesarean delivery respectively. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We analyzed cross-sectional data from the Italian National Statistics Institute (ISTAT) survey on health condition. Socio-demographic variables, information on maternal care services use and health conditions during pregnancy, as well as maternal preferences on delivery, were available for a representative sample of 2,474 primiparous women. After an initial bivariate analysis, we used logistic regressions to evaluate factors associated to the study outcomes. Overall CD accounted for 35.5% of the total births in our sample (CI 33.6-37.4%); moreover, 30.7% (CI 28.6-32.6%) of women preferring natural delivery actually delivered with a CD. Elective CD rate is higher among women over 35 years (22.9%, CI 18.8-27.4%), and those living in the South (26.2%, CI 23.0-29.6%). The multivariate analysis showed that, even adjusting for several confounders, women in the South, receiving care in the private sector had higher chances of CD, also in case of preference for natural delivery. CONCLUSION: Policy interventions are required to reduce the rate of undesired CD, e.g. increasing women knowledge regarding delivery in order to favour aware choices. An effective strategy to reduce CD rate should address the Southern Regions, as women here appear to have a very limited control over the delivery, in spite of a widespread preference for natural delivery.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3444483?pdf=render
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