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Survey of Mode of Delivery and Maternal and Perinatal Outcomes in Canada

Authors :
Jie Yang
B. Anthony Armson
Rebecca Attenborough
George D. Carson
Orlando da Silva
Maureen Heaman
Patricia Janssen
Phil A. Murphy
Jean Charles Pasquier
Reg Sauve
Peter Von Dadelszen
Mark Walker
Shoo K. Lee
John Andruschak
Sheryll Dale
Kenny Der
Terri Pacheco
Karen Vida
Corrine Frick
Nancy Bott
Lee-Ann Carr
Daniel Bedard
Nicole Robert
Ann Sprague
Maryse Berthiaume
Richard Beaudoin
John Fahey
Irene Gagnon
Phil Murphy
Victoria Allen
Alan Bocking
Jim Bottomley
Emmanuel Bujold
Karen Campbell
Jan Christilaw
Joan Crane
Linda Dodds
Allan Donner
Alexandre Dumont
Susie Dzakpasu
Abigail Forson
Bill Fraser
Anita Gagnon
K.S. Joseph
Michael Klein
Michael Kramer
Martine LaFrance
Karine Lemay
Shiliang Liu
Jean-Marie Moutquin
Carl Nimrod
Robert Platt
Beverley O’Brien
Arne Ohlsson
Shi Wu Wen
Metin Gulmezoghu
Archana Shah
Jose Villar
Source :
Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology Canada : JOGC = Journal d'obstetrique et gynecologie du Canada : JOGC. 44(9)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To identify determinants of cesarean delivery (CD) and examine associations between mode of delivery (MOD) and maternal and perinatal outcomes.We conducted a retrospective analysis of a Canadian multicentre birth cohort derived from provincial data collected in 2008/2009. Maternal and perinatal characteristics and outcomes were compared between vaginal and cesarean birth and between the following MOD subgroups: spontaneous vaginal delivery (VD), assisted VD, planned cesarean delivery (CD), and intrapartum CD. Multivariate regression identified determinants of CD and the effects of MOD and previous CD on maternal and perinatal outcomes.The cohort included 264 755 births (72.1% VD and 27.9% CD) from 91 participating institutions. Determinants of CD included maternal age, parity, previous CD, chronic hypertension, diabetes, urinary tract infection or pyelonephritis, gestational hypertension, vaginal bleeding, labour induction, pre-term gestational age, low birth weight, large for gestational age, malpresentation, and male sex. CD was associated with greater risk of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. Subgroup analysis demonstrated higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes with assisted VD and intrapartum CD than spontaneous VD. Planned CD reduced the risk of obstetric wound hematoma and perinatal mortality but increased maternal and neonatal morbidity. Previous CD increased the risk of maternal and neonatal morbidity among multiparous women.The CD rate in Canada is consistent with global trends reflecting demographic and obstetric intervention factors. The risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes with CD warrants evaluation of interventions to safely prevent nonessential cesarean birth.

Details

ISSN :
17012163
Volume :
44
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology Canada : JOGC = Journal d'obstetrique et gynecologie du Canada : JOGC
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....767a1429ab95301efb9a6ed784953e7b