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Posts Tagged ‘research’

Study Finds C-Sections Deliveries Are On The Rise

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

According to MSNBC, government scientists report that birth by C-Section will continue to increase, citing a study into the causes of a trend that may trouble maternal health experts. Researchers with the National Institutes of Health found that nearly one third of first-time moms deliver by C-section. A lead author of a study, Dr. Jun Zhang, researched 230,000 deliveries in 19 nationwide hospitals. Dr. Zhang reported the findings were surprising, especially that doctors found a woman who had already had a cesarean birth will always have a repeat c-section.

The study referenced hospital policy to always repeat c-sections, also suggesting a link between chemically induced labor and higher chances of c-section. Women who had their labor induced were twice as likely to have a cesarean. It is unclear if medication or forcing Mother Nature to deliver a child had an effect on higher surgical deliveries.

Medical experts argue that cesarean deliveries are an over treatment in procedures and tests that provide little or no benefit while subjecting patients to additional health risks. A surgery carries its own risk of infection and medical errors, with experts arguing vaginal births are safer even for women who have had a first c-section.

Since the mid-1990s, the c-section rate in the U.S. increased by more than 50 percent. Some of it may be to prevent medical malpractice and other lawsuits, experts claim. In Scandinavian countries, surgical deliveries hover at 20 percent range with no evidence of ill-effects to mothers or babies.

Pregnancy Related Deaths On the Rise in the U.S.

Friday, March 25th, 2011

According to MSNBC, the national rate of pregnancy-related deaths is on the rise. A new government study found that between 1998 and 2005, the rate of pregnancy-related deaths was 14.5 per 100,000 live births. While it may appear low, those figures are higher than the past few decades. In 1979 where were just under 11 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births.

Researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the extent which the rise reflects a true elevation in women is unclear. Chronic medical conditions are exacerbated by pregnancy, including heart disease. Deaths from actual birth such as hemorrhaging are declining. Even high blood pressure that may occur during pregnancy appears to be declining in rates. Another factor is reporting of deaths, as a new cause coding system was implemented in 1999 and a system before it did not have a pregnancy or maternal checkbox.

For the study, the researchers looked at data on 4,693 pregnancy-related deaths reported to the agency between 1998 and 2005. A pregnancy-related death is any death occurring during or within one year of pregnancy that was attributed to pregnancy complications.

The new findings do not underscore the importance of women’s health before and during pregnancy. A lead researcher of CDC’s division of reproductive health suggests that all women should try to have a pre-pregnancy visit with their doctor and get any health issues under control before becoming pregnant. Doctors warn that our society sees more obese women in of childbearing age which raises the risk of diabetes and high blood pressure.

Study Finds Women With Rheumatoid Arthritis Have Issues Conceiving

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

According to MSNBC, a study by the Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute in Oakland California found that rheumatoid arthritis may hinder conception in some women. The study published in the journal Arthritis & Rheumatism, included 68,000 Danish women who became pregnant between 1996 and 2002, of those 112 had been diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis before pregnancy.

The lead researcher Dr. Damini Jawaheer said that women who are trying to become pregnant are often told to stop using disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs such as methotrexate and infliximab as some can cause birth defects. The research team said it is unclear if the condition or stopping medication causes a flare-up in rheumatoid arthritis that somehow hinders a woman’s ability to conceive.

In general, women with rheumatoid arthritis take longer to conceive and are less likely to get pregnant within 2 months of trying. During the study, 48 percent of women without RA conceived within 2 months of trying, while women with RA had a lower percentage of a successful conception within 2 months of trying. When the researchers took into account age, body weight and other factors, women with RA were more likely to need more than a year to conceive.

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an auto-immune disease occurring when the immune system mistakenly attacks tissue in the joints, leading to inflammation, pain and progressive joint damage. The disease is more common in women than men.

Study Finds No Acupuncture Benefit to Women in Labor

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

According to MSNBC, a study published in the obstetrics journal BJOG found evidence that acupuncture may not ease the pain of childbirth. The findings found that among 105 first-time moms having labor induction showed no benefit from acupuncture given to them before contractions started. The study warns new moms-to-be that acupuncture may not be the answer for a drug-free labor.

Out of 105 first-time moms, two-thirds ended up requesting epidural pain medication during labor compared to 56 percent of women who received a placebo version of the procedure and 77 percent of those given no acupuncture treatment at all.

This study followed two research studies in South Korea and the UK, which analyzed 10 previous clinical trials of acupuncture for labor pain and found no evidence that the procedure eases pain during birthing.

The lead researcher on the current study said that he believed overwhelming research done by different groups suggests that acupuncture offers little benefit to women in labor.

Acupuncture has been used for more than 2,000 years in Chinese medicine to treat a variety of ailments. Specific acupuncture points on the skin are connected to internal pathways that conduct energy. Stimulating these points provides a healthier flow of energy and releases pain by altering signals among nerve cells.

For the current study, out of 105 women 52 were randomly selected to have acupuncture before a painful contraction. In the end, both acupuncture and placebo acupuncture groups showed no difference in the need for pain medication during labor.