Birth Mode after Primary Cesarean among Hispanic and non-Hispanic Women at One U.S. Institution.

Womens Health Issues

The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health, Baltimore, Maryland.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hispanic women in the U.S. had the highest rates of repeat cesarean deliveries (RCD) in 2016, despite lower initial cesarean rates compared to White and Black women, raising questions about the reasons behind this disparity.
  • A study analyzing data from 2010 to 2016 revealed that after adjusting for factors like parity and induction methods, both Hispanic and Black women exhibited significantly higher odds of RCD compared to White women.
  • The findings indicate that demographic and body-related factors do not influence the RCD rates, emphasizing the need for public health initiatives to address potentially preventable reasons contributing to these disparities.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite a lower percentage of primary cesareans than non-Hispanic White and Black women, Hispanic women in the United States had the highest rate of repeat cesarean deliveries (RCD) in 2016; it is unclear if reasons for differences are due to known risk factors. Our study examined the association between ethnicity/race and RCD among women with one previous cesarean and whether demographic (age, marital status, education, language, and delivery year), anthropomorphic (height, prepregnancy body mass index), obstetrical/medical (parity, gestational age, infant birth weight, gestational diabetes, labor induction or augmentation, vaginal birth after cesarean delivery history), or health system (delivery day/time, payer source, provider gender) factors accounted for any observed differences by ethnicity/race.

Methods: Our retrospective cohort study used logistic regression to evaluate the relationship between ethnicity/race and RCD based on data from electronic delivery and prenatal records from 2010 to 2016, including 1800 births to Hispanic and non-Hispanic women with one previous cesarean at a District of Columbia hospital.

Results: Statistically significant differences by ethnicity/race were noted after adjustment for obstetric/medical factors, particularly parity and use of induction or augmentation methods. Hispanic (adjusted odds ratio, 2.48; 95% confidence interval, 1.03-6.01) and Black women (adjusted odds ratio, 2.83; 95% confidence interval, 1.67-4.81) had higher odds of RCD than White women.

Conclusions: Adjustment for parity and use of induction or augmentation methods revealed higher odds of RCD for Hispanic and Black women than White women. Demographic and anthropometric factors did not alter these results. Our work is a first step in creating effective public health policy and programs that target potentially preventable RCD by highlighting the need to evaluate risk factors beyond those included in the literature to date.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.whi.2019.09.001DOI Listing

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